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DUKAS_148830994_EYE
'I have to control the flashbacks': Anoosheh Ashoori on life after being freed from an Iranian jail
The British Iranian Anoosheh Ashoori was released from prison after five years in March. The 68-year-old is cherishing time with family and has run the London marathon - but his ordeal still haunts him.
A gentle, open, yet determined man, Anoosheh insists he has not grown angry about his five years in an Iranian jail on ludicrous charges of spying for Israel.
But Ashoori has discovered the elation of freedom, returning to his wife, Sherry, their two grownup children and a mountain of yapping dogs at his home in south London.
Patrick Wintour is interviewing one of the two Iranian British dual nationals that have been released last week. His name is Anoosheh Ashoori and he is now living in Lewisham. Photographed with his daughter Elira Ashoori, his wife Sherry Izadi and thier dogs Chickpea and Romeo. Also photoraphed some of the wood art he did in the prison workshop, including an exact carving of Anoosheh’s hand in traditional Vulcan [he’s a Treckie!] pose, a tribute to the Aristocats [a gift for Sherry] an abstract of the mona Lisa and a beautifully inlaid Eagle.
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DUKAS_118915045_EYE
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall. Most visitors to Cornwall head to the surf beaches, the picturesque fishing harbours, art galleries, gardens or castles in search of light and joy. However, a murkier side of life in the south-west of Britain is being told from within the towering granite walls of an 18th-century prison, which is reopening as a new visitor attraction on Thursday. The £8.5m Bodmin jail recounts tales of crime and punishment in Cornwall from the 1700s to the early 20th century. Visitors are treated, if that is the right way to put it, to a subterranean “dark walk” that uses special effects to expose the lives and deaths of some of those once imprisoned here. They are invited to stroll in and out of the cells where prisoners once lived and to inspect the artefacts found in excavations of the prison including bunches of rusty keys and even what might be the skull of the fabled Beast of Bodmin. The most daring can take part in paranormal events or watch horror films, as the jail claims to be one of the most haunted places in the UK.The new Bodmin Jail attraction, in Cornwall, which is due to open on the 1st October, 2020. Kirsten Honey, Paranormal Manager.
© Jim Wileman / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_118915025_EYE
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall. Most visitors to Cornwall head to the surf beaches, the picturesque fishing harbours, art galleries, gardens or castles in search of light and joy. However, a murkier side of life in the south-west of Britain is being told from within the towering granite walls of an 18th-century prison, which is reopening as a new visitor attraction on Thursday. The £8.5m Bodmin jail recounts tales of crime and punishment in Cornwall from the 1700s to the early 20th century. Visitors are treated, if that is the right way to put it, to a subterranean “dark walk” that uses special effects to expose the lives and deaths of some of those once imprisoned here. They are invited to stroll in and out of the cells where prisoners once lived and to inspect the artefacts found in excavations of the prison including bunches of rusty keys and even what might be the skull of the fabled Beast of Bodmin. The most daring can take part in paranormal events or watch horror films, as the jail claims to be one of the most haunted places in the UK.The new Bodmin Jail attraction, in Cornwall, which is due to open on the 1st October, 2020.
© Jim Wileman / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_118915023_EYE
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall. Most visitors to Cornwall head to the surf beaches, the picturesque fishing harbours, art galleries, gardens or castles in search of light and joy. However, a murkier side of life in the south-west of Britain is being told from within the towering granite walls of an 18th-century prison, which is reopening as a new visitor attraction on Thursday. The £8.5m Bodmin jail recounts tales of crime and punishment in Cornwall from the 1700s to the early 20th century. Visitors are treated, if that is the right way to put it, to a subterranean “dark walk” that uses special effects to expose the lives and deaths of some of those once imprisoned here. They are invited to stroll in and out of the cells where prisoners once lived and to inspect the artefacts found in excavations of the prison including bunches of rusty keys and even what might be the skull of the fabled Beast of Bodmin. The most daring can take part in paranormal events or watch horror films, as the jail claims to be one of the most haunted places in the UK.The new Bodmin Jail attraction, in Cornwall, which is due to open on the 1st October, 2020. Kirsten Honey, Paranormal Manager.
© Jim Wileman / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_118915030_EYE
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall. Most visitors to Cornwall head to the surf beaches, the picturesque fishing harbours, art galleries, gardens or castles in search of light and joy. However, a murkier side of life in the south-west of Britain is being told from within the towering granite walls of an 18th-century prison, which is reopening as a new visitor attraction on Thursday. The £8.5m Bodmin jail recounts tales of crime and punishment in Cornwall from the 1700s to the early 20th century. Visitors are treated, if that is the right way to put it, to a subterranean “dark walk” that uses special effects to expose the lives and deaths of some of those once imprisoned here. They are invited to stroll in and out of the cells where prisoners once lived and to inspect the artefacts found in excavations of the prison including bunches of rusty keys and even what might be the skull of the fabled Beast of Bodmin. The most daring can take part in paranormal events or watch horror films, as the jail claims to be one of the most haunted places in the UK.The new Bodmin Jail attraction, in Cornwall, which is due to open on the 1st October, 2020. Kirsten Honey, Paranormal Manager.
© Jim Wileman / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_118915028_EYE
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall. Most visitors to Cornwall head to the surf beaches, the picturesque fishing harbours, art galleries, gardens or castles in search of light and joy. However, a murkier side of life in the south-west of Britain is being told from within the towering granite walls of an 18th-century prison, which is reopening as a new visitor attraction on Thursday. The £8.5m Bodmin jail recounts tales of crime and punishment in Cornwall from the 1700s to the early 20th century. Visitors are treated, if that is the right way to put it, to a subterranean “dark walk” that uses special effects to expose the lives and deaths of some of those once imprisoned here. They are invited to stroll in and out of the cells where prisoners once lived and to inspect the artefacts found in excavations of the prison including bunches of rusty keys and even what might be the skull of the fabled Beast of Bodmin. The most daring can take part in paranormal events or watch horror films, as the jail claims to be one of the most haunted places in the UK.The new Bodmin Jail attraction, in Cornwall, which is due to open on the 1st October, 2020. Kirsten Honey, Paranormal Manager.
© Jim Wileman / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_118915066_EYE
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall. Most visitors to Cornwall head to the surf beaches, the picturesque fishing harbours, art galleries, gardens or castles in search of light and joy. However, a murkier side of life in the south-west of Britain is being told from within the towering granite walls of an 18th-century prison, which is reopening as a new visitor attraction on Thursday. The £8.5m Bodmin jail recounts tales of crime and punishment in Cornwall from the 1700s to the early 20th century. Visitors are treated, if that is the right way to put it, to a subterranean “dark walk” that uses special effects to expose the lives and deaths of some of those once imprisoned here. They are invited to stroll in and out of the cells where prisoners once lived and to inspect the artefacts found in excavations of the prison including bunches of rusty keys and even what might be the skull of the fabled Beast of Bodmin. The most daring can take part in paranormal events or watch horror films, as the jail claims to be one of the most haunted places in the UK.The new Bodmin Jail attraction, in Cornwall, which is due to open on the 1st October, 2020. Kirsten Honey, Paranormal Manager.
© Jim Wileman / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_118915043_EYE
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall. Most visitors to Cornwall head to the surf beaches, the picturesque fishing harbours, art galleries, gardens or castles in search of light and joy. However, a murkier side of life in the south-west of Britain is being told from within the towering granite walls of an 18th-century prison, which is reopening as a new visitor attraction on Thursday. The £8.5m Bodmin jail recounts tales of crime and punishment in Cornwall from the 1700s to the early 20th century. Visitors are treated, if that is the right way to put it, to a subterranean “dark walk” that uses special effects to expose the lives and deaths of some of those once imprisoned here. They are invited to stroll in and out of the cells where prisoners once lived and to inspect the artefacts found in excavations of the prison including bunches of rusty keys and even what might be the skull of the fabled Beast of Bodmin. The most daring can take part in paranormal events or watch horror films, as the jail claims to be one of the most haunted places in the UK.The new Bodmin Jail attraction, in Cornwall, which is due to open on the 1st October, 2020. Kirsten Honey, Paranormal Manager.
© Jim Wileman / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_118915046_EYE
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall. Most visitors to Cornwall head to the surf beaches, the picturesque fishing harbours, art galleries, gardens or castles in search of light and joy. However, a murkier side of life in the south-west of Britain is being told from within the towering granite walls of an 18th-century prison, which is reopening as a new visitor attraction on Thursday. The £8.5m Bodmin jail recounts tales of crime and punishment in Cornwall from the 1700s to the early 20th century. Visitors are treated, if that is the right way to put it, to a subterranean “dark walk” that uses special effects to expose the lives and deaths of some of those once imprisoned here. They are invited to stroll in and out of the cells where prisoners once lived and to inspect the artefacts found in excavations of the prison including bunches of rusty keys and even what might be the skull of the fabled Beast of Bodmin. The most daring can take part in paranormal events or watch horror films, as the jail claims to be one of the most haunted places in the UK.The new Bodmin Jail attraction, in Cornwall, which is due to open on the 1st October, 2020. Kirsten Honey, Paranormal Manager.
© Jim Wileman / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_118915044_EYE
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall. Most visitors to Cornwall head to the surf beaches, the picturesque fishing harbours, art galleries, gardens or castles in search of light and joy. However, a murkier side of life in the south-west of Britain is being told from within the towering granite walls of an 18th-century prison, which is reopening as a new visitor attraction on Thursday. The £8.5m Bodmin jail recounts tales of crime and punishment in Cornwall from the 1700s to the early 20th century. Visitors are treated, if that is the right way to put it, to a subterranean “dark walk” that uses special effects to expose the lives and deaths of some of those once imprisoned here. They are invited to stroll in and out of the cells where prisoners once lived and to inspect the artefacts found in excavations of the prison including bunches of rusty keys and even what might be the skull of the fabled Beast of Bodmin. The most daring can take part in paranormal events or watch horror films, as the jail claims to be one of the most haunted places in the UK.The new Bodmin Jail attraction, in Cornwall, which is due to open on the 1st October, 2020. Kirsten Honey, Paranormal Manager.
© Jim Wileman / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_118915049_EYE
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall. Most visitors to Cornwall head to the surf beaches, the picturesque fishing harbours, art galleries, gardens or castles in search of light and joy. However, a murkier side of life in the south-west of Britain is being told from within the towering granite walls of an 18th-century prison, which is reopening as a new visitor attraction on Thursday. The £8.5m Bodmin jail recounts tales of crime and punishment in Cornwall from the 1700s to the early 20th century. Visitors are treated, if that is the right way to put it, to a subterranean “dark walk” that uses special effects to expose the lives and deaths of some of those once imprisoned here. They are invited to stroll in and out of the cells where prisoners once lived and to inspect the artefacts found in excavations of the prison including bunches of rusty keys and even what might be the skull of the fabled Beast of Bodmin. The most daring can take part in paranormal events or watch horror films, as the jail claims to be one of the most haunted places in the UK.The new Bodmin Jail attraction, in Cornwall, which is due to open on the 1st October, 2020. Kirsten Honey, Paranormal Manager.
© Jim Wileman / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_118915064_EYE
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall. Most visitors to Cornwall head to the surf beaches, the picturesque fishing harbours, art galleries, gardens or castles in search of light and joy. However, a murkier side of life in the south-west of Britain is being told from within the towering granite walls of an 18th-century prison, which is reopening as a new visitor attraction on Thursday. The £8.5m Bodmin jail recounts tales of crime and punishment in Cornwall from the 1700s to the early 20th century. Visitors are treated, if that is the right way to put it, to a subterranean “dark walk” that uses special effects to expose the lives and deaths of some of those once imprisoned here. They are invited to stroll in and out of the cells where prisoners once lived and to inspect the artefacts found in excavations of the prison including bunches of rusty keys and even what might be the skull of the fabled Beast of Bodmin. The most daring can take part in paranormal events or watch horror films, as the jail claims to be one of the most haunted places in the UK.The new Bodmin Jail attraction, in Cornwall, which is due to open on the 1st October, 2020.
© Jim Wileman / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_117192240_EYE
Cheshire prison worker warned of problems before death of baby. Manager of mother-and-baby unit at Styal Prison wrote to politicians about her concerns for pregnant inmates.
Tamsin Morris who ran a mother and baby unit at HMP Styal. She has spoken about the appalling way pregnant women and new mothers are treated while in prison.
© Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_117192235_EYE
Cheshire prison worker warned of problems before death of baby. Manager of mother-and-baby unit at Styal Prison wrote to politicians about her concerns for pregnant inmates.
Tamsin Morris who ran a mother and baby unit at HMP Styal. She has spoken about the appalling way pregnant women and new mothers are treated while in prison.
© Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_117192231_EYE
Cheshire prison worker warned of problems before death of baby. Manager of mother-and-baby unit at Styal Prison wrote to politicians about her concerns for pregnant inmates.
Tamsin Morris who ran a mother and baby unit at HMP Styal. She has spoken about the appalling way pregnant women and new mothers are treated while in prison.
© Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_117192237_EYE
Cheshire prison worker warned of problems before death of baby. Manager of mother-and-baby unit at Styal Prison wrote to politicians about her concerns for pregnant inmates.
Tamsin Morris who ran a mother and baby unit at HMP Styal. She has spoken about the appalling way pregnant women and new mothers are treated while in prison.
© Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_117192232_EYE
Cheshire prison worker warned of problems before death of baby. Manager of mother-and-baby unit at Styal Prison wrote to politicians about her concerns for pregnant inmates.
Tamsin Morris who ran a mother and baby unit at HMP Styal. She has spoken about the appalling way pregnant women and new mothers are treated while in prison.
© Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_117192234_EYE
Cheshire prison worker warned of problems before death of baby. Manager of mother-and-baby unit at Styal Prison wrote to politicians about her concerns for pregnant inmates.
Tamsin Morris who ran a mother and baby unit at HMP Styal. She has spoken about the appalling way pregnant women and new mothers are treated while in prison.
© Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_117192236_EYE
Cheshire prison worker warned of problems before death of baby. Manager of mother-and-baby unit at Styal Prison wrote to politicians about her concerns for pregnant inmates.
Tamsin Morris who ran a mother and baby unit at HMP Styal. She has spoken about the appalling way pregnant women and new mothers are treated while in prison.
© Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_117192233_EYE
Cheshire prison worker warned of problems before death of baby. Manager of mother-and-baby unit at Styal Prison wrote to politicians about her concerns for pregnant inmates.
Tamsin Morris who ran a mother and baby unit at HMP Styal. She has spoken about the appalling way pregnant women and new mothers are treated while in prison.
© Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_117192230_EYE
Cheshire prison worker warned of problems before death of baby. Manager of mother-and-baby unit at Styal Prison wrote to politicians about her concerns for pregnant inmates.
Tamsin Morris who ran a mother and baby unit at HMP Styal. She has spoken about the appalling way pregnant women and new mothers are treated while in prison.
© Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_115854280_EYE
'Take him down': ex-officers accuse Fiji's prison commissioner of ordering staff to beat inmates. Exclusive: Four former prison officers seeking asylum in Australia claim Francis Kean, brother-in-law of Fiji’s PM, ran a brutal campaign of intimidation.
Hendrik Charles De Wachter. Four former prison officers from Fiji are seeking asylum in Australia claiming the prime minister’s brother-in-law, who is the commissioner of the corrections service, routinely ordered the beating and mistreatment of prisoners.Fiji prison guards .
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DUKAS_115854284_EYE
'Take him down': ex-officers accuse Fiji's prison commissioner of ordering staff to beat inmates. Exclusive: Four former prison officers seeking asylum in Australia claim Francis Kean, brother-in-law of Fiji’s PM, ran a brutal campaign of intimidation.
Rokodausiga Josua Talemaisolomoni, 44, who served in the Corrections Service for 21 years and was the officer in charge of Suva prison. Four former prison officers from Fiji are seeking asylum in Australia claiming the prime minister’s brother-in-law, who is the commissioner of the corrections service, routinely ordered the beating and mistreatment of prisoners.Fiji prison guards .
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DUKAS_115854282_EYE
'Take him down': ex-officers accuse Fiji's prison commissioner of ordering staff to beat inmates. Exclusive: Four former prison officers seeking asylum in Australia claim Francis Kean, brother-in-law of Fiji’s PM, ran a brutal campaign of intimidation.
Robert Delana, 43, who served in a variety of roles during his 10 years in the Corrections Service. Four former prison officers from Fiji are seeking asylum in Australia claiming the prime minister’s brother-in-law, who is the commissioner of the corrections service, routinely ordered the beating and mistreatment of prisoners.Fiji prison guards .
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DUKAS_115854281_EYE
'Take him down': ex-officers accuse Fiji's prison commissioner of ordering staff to beat inmates. Exclusive: Four former prison officers seeking asylum in Australia claim Francis Kean, brother-in-law of Fiji’s PM, ran a brutal campaign of intimidation.
Hendrik Charles De Wachter. Four former prison officers from Fiji are seeking asylum in Australia claiming the prime minister’s brother-in-law, who is the commissioner of the corrections service, routinely ordered the beating and mistreatment of prisoners.Fiji prison guards .
© Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_115854278_EYE
'Take him down': ex-officers accuse Fiji's prison commissioner of ordering staff to beat inmates. Exclusive: Four former prison officers seeking asylum in Australia claim Francis Kean, brother-in-law of Fiji’s PM, ran a brutal campaign of intimidation.
Rokodausiga Josua Talemaisolomoni, 44, who served in the Corrections Service for 21 years and was the officer in charge of Suva prison. Four former prison officers from Fiji are seeking asylum in Australia claiming the prime minister’s brother-in-law, who is the commissioner of the corrections service, routinely ordered the beating and mistreatment of prisoners.Fiji prison guards .
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DUKAS_115854279_EYE
'Take him down': ex-officers accuse Fiji's prison commissioner of ordering staff to beat inmates. Exclusive: Four former prison officers seeking asylum in Australia claim Francis Kean, brother-in-law of Fiji’s PM, ran a brutal campaign of intimidation.
Robert Delana, 43, who served in a variety of roles during his 10 years in the Corrections Service. Four former prison officers from Fiji are seeking asylum in Australia claiming the prime minister’s brother-in-law, who is the commissioner of the corrections service, routinely ordered the beating and mistreatment of prisoners.Fiji prison guards .
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DUKAS_115854283_EYE
'Take him down': ex-officers accuse Fiji's prison commissioner of ordering staff to beat inmates. Exclusive: Four former prison officers seeking asylum in Australia claim Francis Kean, brother-in-law of Fiji’s PM, ran a brutal campaign of intimidation.
Isikeli Ravula, 31, who worked on the K9 unit which conducted searches for contraband Four former prison officers from Fiji are seeking asylum in Australia claiming the prime minister’s brother-in-law, who is the commissioner of the corrections service, routinely ordered the beating and mistreatment of prisoners.Fiji prison guards .
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DUKAS_119994846_EYE
Australian women in prison. A mass imprisonment crisis': why more women are doing time. Changes to state bail laws intended to target violent men have instead contributed to an alarming growth in the female prison population in Australia
Frances Drake, is passionate about helping other women who have done time in prison. She feels the prison system is letting women down and only getting worse. She has been to prison and spent time in a number of NSW womens prisons. She starting using the drug Ice when husband was terminally ill with cancer. He died and her son died too in quick succession. She is photographed outside a public housing block of apartments in Liverpool where Drake is a carer for an elderly woman Sydney, Australia.
Frances Drake spent three years on remand at Silverwater correctional centre. According to the AIHW, 40% of women in jail in Australia are on remand, meaning they have not been found guilty to a crime.
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DUKAS_119994833_EYE
Australian women in prison. A mass imprisonment crisis': why more women are doing time. Changes to state bail laws intended to target violent men have instead contributed to an alarming growth in the female prison population in Australia
Jenna Hughes, a former police officer, spent three months of her 12-month sentence in an isolation cell in an effort to protect her from the other prisoners. ÔFive years on I still struggle, I still have anxiety and I think about prison every day,Õ she says. Photographed at Broadbeach on the Gold Coast, Qld, Australia.
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DUKAS_119994845_EYE
Australian women in prison. A mass imprisonment crisis': why more women are doing time. Changes to state bail laws intended to target violent men have instead contributed to an alarming growth in the female prison population in Australia
Jenna Hughes, a former police officer, spent three months of her 12-month sentence in an isolation cell in an effort to protect her from the other prisoners. ÔFive years on I still struggle, I still have anxiety and I think about prison every day,Õ she says. Photographed at Broadbeach on the Gold Coast, Qld, Australia.
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DUKAS_119994834_EYE
Australian women in prison. A mass imprisonment crisis': why more women are doing time. Changes to state bail laws intended to target violent men have instead contributed to an alarming growth in the female prison population in Australia
Jenna Hughes, a former police officer, spent three months of her 12-month sentence in an isolation cell in an effort to protect her from the other prisoners. ÔFive years on I still struggle, I still have anxiety and I think about prison every day,Õ she says. Photographed at Broadbeach on the Gold Coast, Qld, Australia.
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DUKAS_181729792_EYE
Forgotten by the west, Syria's IS prisons are under threat as militant group mobilises.
Kurdish officials warn that Islamic State threat is greater than ever in the vacuum left from Syrian regime's collapse.
Outside the heavily fortified prison walls, the world has seemingly tried to forget that thousands of suspected IS fighters are still languishing in detention. But experts warn IS has not forgotten about them.
Prison authorities tightened security guidelines in IS prison after a 2022 attack sprung hundreds of members of the extremist group from detention.
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DUKAS_181729796_EYE
Forgotten by the west, Syria's IS prisons are under threat as militant group mobilises.
Kurdish officials warn that Islamic State threat is greater than ever in the vacuum left from Syrian regime's collapse.
Outside the heavily fortified prison walls, the world has seemingly tried to forget that thousands of suspected IS fighters are still languishing in detention. But experts warn IS has not forgotten about them.
Mustafa Hajj-Obeid, 41, taken in Panorama prison, Hasakeh.
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DUKAS_181729788_EYE
Forgotten by the west, Syria's IS prisons are under threat as militant group mobilises.
Kurdish officials warn that Islamic State threat is greater than ever in the vacuum left from Syrian regime's collapse.
Outside the heavily fortified prison walls, the world has seemingly tried to forget that thousands of suspected IS fighters are still languishing in detention. But experts warn IS has not forgotten about them.
Muhammad Saqib Raza, 45, claimed he was kidnaped against his will into areas controlled by the IS in Syria and wants to be repatriated to the UK
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DUKAS_104747588_EYE
Liberty Choir’s Richie at the V&A, where they have performed. Released from prison five years ago, he is a passionate advocate of the power of communal singing to help rehabilitate offenders.
Liberty Choir’s Richie at the V&A, where they have performed. Released from prison five years ago, he is a passionate advocate of the power of communal singing to help rehabilitate offenders.
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DUKAS_104747593_EYE
Liberty Choir’s Richie at the V&A, where they have performed. Released from prison five years ago, he is a passionate advocate of the power of communal singing to help rehabilitate offenders.
Liberty Choir’s Richie at the V&A, where they have performed. Released from prison five years ago, he is a passionate advocate of the power of communal singing to help rehabilitate offenders.
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DUKAS_104747590_EYE
Liberty Choir’s Richie at the V&A, where they have performed. Released from prison five years ago, he is a passionate advocate of the power of communal singing to help rehabilitate offenders.
Liberty Choir’s Richie at the V&A, where they have performed. Released from prison five years ago, he is a passionate advocate of the power of communal singing to help rehabilitate offenders.
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DUKAS_104747591_EYE
Liberty Choir’s Richie at the V&A, where they have performed. Released from prison five years ago, he is a passionate advocate of the power of communal singing to help rehabilitate offenders.
Liberty Choir’s Richie at the V&A, where they have performed. Released from prison five years ago, he is a passionate advocate of the power of communal singing to help rehabilitate offenders.
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DUKAS_104747594_EYE
Liberty Choir’s Richie at the V&A, where they have performed. Released from prison five years ago, he is a passionate advocate of the power of communal singing to help rehabilitate offenders.
Liberty Choir’s Richie at the V&A, where they have performed. Released from prison five years ago, he is a passionate advocate of the power of communal singing to help rehabilitate offenders.
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DUKAS_104747592_EYE
Liberty Choir’s Richie at the V&A, where they have performed. Released from prison five years ago, he is a passionate advocate of the power of communal singing to help rehabilitate offenders.
Liberty Choir’s Richie at the V&A, where they have performed. Released from prison five years ago, he is a passionate advocate of the power of communal singing to help rehabilitate offenders.
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DUKAS_104747587_EYE
Liberty Choir’s Richie at the V&A, where they have performed. Released from prison five years ago, he is a passionate advocate of the power of communal singing to help rehabilitate offenders.
Liberty Choir’s Richie at the V&A, where they have performed. Released from prison five years ago, he is a passionate advocate of the power of communal singing to help rehabilitate offenders.
© Richard Saker / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_104747586_EYE
Liberty Choir’s Richie at the V&A, where they have performed. Released from prison five years ago, he is a passionate advocate of the power of communal singing to help rehabilitate offenders.
Liberty Choir’s Richie at the V&A, where they have performed. Released from prison five years ago, he is a passionate advocate of the power of communal singing to help rehabilitate offenders.
© Richard Saker / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_104747589_EYE
Liberty Choir’s Richie at the V&A, where they have performed. Released from prison five years ago, he is a passionate advocate of the power of communal singing to help rehabilitate offenders.
Liberty ChoirÕs Richie at the V&A, where they have performed. Released from prison five years ago, he is a passionate advocate of the power of communal singing to help rehabilitate offenders.
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DUKAS_102645224_EYE
'We teach the hard way': prison coding initiative launches in Teesside. Innovative scheme is Europe’s first to train convicts to code and connect them with employers.
Prisoners in English jails are being taught coding to give them the chance to earn up to £600 a day and plug a shortage of web developers on release. Code 4000, the first European initiative to train convicts to code and connect them with employers in the outside world, has launched at HMP Holme House in Stockton, Teesside.HMP Holme Moss, the first prison to introduce Code 4000 studies after a successful pilot project at HMP Humber to train inmates to become coders and prepare them for employment upon release from jail.
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DUKAS_102645223_EYE
'We teach the hard way': prison coding initiative launches in Teesside. Innovative scheme is Europe’s first to train convicts to code and connect them with employers.
Prisoners in English jails are being taught coding to give them the chance to earn up to £600 a day and plug a shortage of web developers on release. Code 4000, the first European initiative to train convicts to code and connect them with employers in the outside world, has launched at HMP Holme House in Stockton, Teesside.HMP Holme Moss, the first prison to introduce Code 4000 studies after a successful pilot project at HMP Humber to train inmates to become coders and prepare them for employment upon release from jail.
Ashley Fulcher, the first ex-offender to take Code 4000 training and set up his own company, Shape Up Websites, after release from HMP Humber.
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DUKAS_102645221_EYE
'We teach the hard way': prison coding initiative launches in Teesside. Innovative scheme is Europe’s first to train convicts to code and connect them with employers.
Prisoners in English jails are being taught coding to give them the chance to earn up to £600 a day and plug a shortage of web developers on release. Code 4000, the first European initiative to train convicts to code and connect them with employers in the outside world, has launched at HMP Holme House in Stockton, Teesside.HMP Holme Moss, the first prison to introduce Code 4000 studies after a successful pilot project at HMP Humber to train inmates to become coders and prepare them for employment upon release from jail.
Ashley Fulcher, the first ex-offender to take Code 4000 training and set up his own company, Shape Up Websites, after release from HMP Humber.
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DUKAS_102645222_EYE
'We teach the hard way': prison coding initiative launches in Teesside. Innovative scheme is Europe’s first to train convicts to code and connect them with employers.
Prisoners in English jails are being taught coding to give them the chance to earn up to £600 a day and plug a shortage of web developers on release. Code 4000, the first European initiative to train convicts to code and connect them with employers in the outside world, has launched at HMP Holme House in Stockton, Teesside.HMP Holme Moss, the first prison to introduce Code 4000 studies after a successful pilot project at HMP Humber to train inmates to become coders and prepare them for employment upon release from jail.
Ashley Fulcher, the first ex-offender to take Code 4000 training and set up his own company, Shape Up Websites, after release from HMP Humber.
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DUKAS_102645220_EYE
'We teach the hard way': prison coding initiative launches in Teesside. Innovative scheme is Europe’s first to train convicts to code and connect them with employers.
Prisoners in English jails are being taught coding to give them the chance to earn up to £600 a day and plug a shortage of web developers on release. Code 4000, the first European initiative to train convicts to code and connect them with employers in the outside world, has launched at HMP Holme House in Stockton, Teesside.HMP Holme Moss, the first prison to introduce Code 4000 studies after a successful pilot project at HMP Humber to train inmates to become coders and prepare them for employment upon release from jail.
Ashley Fulcher, the first ex-offender to take Code 4000 training and set up his own company, Shape Up Websites, after release from HMP Humber.
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DUKAS_102645219_EYE
'We teach the hard way': prison coding initiative launches in Teesside. Innovative scheme is Europe’s first to train convicts to code and connect them with employers.
Prisoners in English jails are being taught coding to give them the chance to earn up to £600 a day and plug a shortage of web developers on release. Code 4000, the first European initiative to train convicts to code and connect them with employers in the outside world, has launched at HMP Holme House in Stockton, Teesside.HMP Holme Moss, the first prison to introduce Code 4000 studies after a successful pilot project at HMP Humber to train inmates to become coders and prepare them for employment upon release from jail.
Ashley Fulcher, the first ex-offender to take Code 4000 training and set up his own company, Shape Up Websites, after release from HMP Humber.
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