escaped – USMAIL24.COM https://usmail24.com News Portal from USA Sat, 24 Feb 2024 04:40:48 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.4 https://usmail24.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/Untitled-design-1-100x100.png escaped – USMAIL24.COM https://usmail24.com 32 32 195427244 Flaco, escaped Central Park Zoo Owl and Defier of Doubts, is dead https://usmail24.com/flaco-owl-central-park-zoo-dead-html/ https://usmail24.com/flaco-owl-central-park-zoo-dead-html/#respond Sat, 24 Feb 2024 04:40:48 +0000 https://usmail24.com/flaco-owl-central-park-zoo-dead-html/

Flaco, the Eurasian eagle owl whose escape from the Central Park Zoo and subsequent life at large in Manhattan captured the public’s attention, died Friday evening after apparently hitting a building on the Upper West Side, officials said. The Wildlife Conservation Society, which operates the zoo, said in a statement that Flaco was found on […]

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Flaco, the Eurasian eagle owl whose escape from the Central Park Zoo and subsequent life at large in Manhattan captured the public’s attention, died Friday evening after apparently hitting a building on the Upper West Side, officials said.

The Wildlife Conservation Society, which operates the zoo, said in a statement that Flaco was found on the ground after hitting a building on West 89th Street.

Residents of the building contacted the Wild Bird Fund, a rescue organization, whose staff responded quickly, picked him up and pronounced him dead a short time later, the association said.

Zoo officials took him to the Bronx Zoo, where an autopsy will be performed to determine the cause of death. He would have turned fourteen next month.

Flaco’s year as a free bird began on the evening of February 2, 2023, when someone tore to pieces the mesh of the modest abode where he had lived most of his life. Police said in January that no arrests had been made and the investigation was continuing.

“The vandal who damaged Flaco’s exhibit endangered the bird’s safety and is ultimately responsible for its death,” the Wildlife Conservation Society said in a statement. “We remain hopeful that the NYPD, which is investigating the vandalism, will ultimately make an arrest.”

Flaco began attracting a passionate fan base as soon as he showed up on Fifth Avenue’s doorstep the night he was let go. He looked out of place, with police officers standing nearby and Bergdorf Goodman a short flight away. He soon settled in Central Park.

As the days passed and he remained free, the question of whether he could survive life outside the zoo turned his plight into an underdog story. When he showed he could stick it out, he became a feathered, feel-good figure in hard times, with birdwatchers, ornithologists and everyday New Yorkers following him in person or, in many cases, following his exploits online.

But every day outside captivity was risky – even without the dangers of an urban environment. Wild Eurasian eagle owls can live more than 40 years in captivity, but average only 20 years in their natural habitat.

Hitting a building, especially a window, was one of the deadly threats he faced. Others include death from rodenticide poisoning in the rats he ate, and a fatal collision with a vehicle.

But for over a year, Flaco proved immune.

He was able to avoid vehicles by largely sticking to roofs, water towers and other elevated features of the built environment after leaving Central Park around early November. But the risk that he would die in a construction strike was high: no less 230,000 birds According to the National Audubon Society, people die every year in New York City when they crash into windows.

David Lei, who with his partner Jacqueline Emery has followed and photographed Flaco since his escape, said in an email that he and Ms. Emery were “sad beyond words, but held on to all our fond memories of him.”

This is a development story. It will be updated.

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Arkansas Authorities Arrest Second Escaped Prisoner https://usmail24.com/second-arkansas-escaped-inmate-caught-html/ https://usmail24.com/second-arkansas-escaped-inmate-caught-html/#respond Tue, 30 Jan 2024 03:18:47 +0000 https://usmail24.com/second-arkansas-escaped-inmate-caught-html/

Authorities in Arkansas on Monday captured a murder suspect who escaped from a local jail with another inmate, ending a weeklong manhunt. Officers conducting surveillance in Pine Bluff, Ark., spotted the suspect, Jatonia Bryant, 23, walking down the street just after 11 a.m. wearing clothing matching a description provided to law enforcement authorities and arrested […]

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Authorities in Arkansas on Monday captured a murder suspect who escaped from a local jail with another inmate, ending a weeklong manhunt.

Officers conducting surveillance in Pine Bluff, Ark., spotted the suspect, Jatonia Bryant, 23, walking down the street just after 11 a.m. wearing clothing matching a description provided to law enforcement authorities and arrested him “without incident.” the Jefferson County Sheriff's Office said a press release.

Mr. Bryant, who is charged with murder in the death of a man last year, and Noah Roush, 22, were found missing Jan. 22 from the WC “Dub” Brassell Adult Detention Center in Pine Bluff, about 40 miles away . southeast of Little Rock, after a daring escape that involved bursting through holes they made in the ceiling and roof of the facility, the sheriff's office said.

On Thursday, officers arrested Mr. Roush near an abandoned home in Pine Bluff where he had reportedly been seen. Mr. Roush was in jail on charges of burglary and theft.

Mr. Bryant had remained at large, although authorities last week expressed confidence that he was hiding somewhere in the United States city ​​with almost 40,000 inhabitants.

Escape charges were pending against both men on Monday, authorities said.

“Our investigators will continue to work to bring criminal charges against all people who assisted Roush and Bryant in evading arrest,” the sheriff's news release said.

Jatonia Bryant after his arrest Monday morning in Pine Bluff, Ark.Credit…Captain Yohance Brunson/Jefferson County Sheriff's Office

Authorities also announced Monday that Mr. Bryant and Mr. Roush had fled for about 36 hours before prison staff noticed they were gone, having previously failed to get an accurate count.

Jefferson County Sheriff Lafayette Woods Jr. also suggested that flaws in the jail's design and structure allowed the pair to escape, saying the episode would serve as a “catalyst for further capital improvements” at the jail.

Last week, sheriff's office spokesman Maj. John Bean said surveillance footage showed the two men had worked together to cut a hole in the ceiling above a shower stall and escape.

Sheriff Woods added that the facility, which opened in 2007 with 310 beds to alleviate overcrowded county jails, was suffering from staff shortages and was down to 20 guards, down from a previous record of 48.

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One of two inmates who escaped from an Arkansas prison is captured https://usmail24.com/arkansas-escaped-inmate-caught-html/ https://usmail24.com/arkansas-escaped-inmate-caught-html/#respond Fri, 26 Jan 2024 12:30:12 +0000 https://usmail24.com/arkansas-escaped-inmate-caught-html/

One of two men who escaped from an Arkansas prison this week has been captured, authorities said, after officials received a tip that he was hiding in an abandoned house. The other escapee, a murder suspect, was still at large. Noah Roush, 22, tried to run when authorities spotted him near the Jefferson County Sheriff's […]

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One of two men who escaped from an Arkansas prison this week has been captured, authorities said, after officials received a tip that he was hiding in an abandoned house. The other escapee, a murder suspect, was still at large.

Noah Roush, 22, tried to run when authorities spotted him near the Jefferson County Sheriff's Office's abandoned home in Pine Bluff, Ark. said in a press release, but was challenged and taken into custody. He is expected to be charged with second-degree escape, authorities said.

On Monday morning, authorities discovered that Mr. Roush, 22, and Jatonia Bryant, 23, had escaped from the WC “Dub” Brassell Adult Detention Center in Pine Bluff, about 40 miles southeast of Little Rock.

Noah RouschCredit…Jefferson County Sheriff's Office

Mr. Roush was held on probable cause charges of residential burglary and theft of property. Mr. Bryant had been arrested on murder charges in connection with the killing of Christopher Harris, 49, who was fatally shot in Pine Bluff last year.

Mr. Bryant is said to be in Pine Bluff, a city in the United States almost 40,000 peoplesaid Maj. John Bean, spokesman for the sheriff's office, adding that authorities were still pursuing leads and continuing their search Thursday evening. The sheriff's office offered a $2,500 reward to the public for information leading to Mr. Bryant's arrest.

Authorities also revealed Thursday how the undetected escape unfolded.

Surveillance footage appeared to show the two men working together, Major Bean said, describing a scene somewhat reminiscent of the infamous 1962 prison break on Alcatraz Island, which was later depicted in a film starring Clint Eastwood in the main role.

“They managed to cut a hole in the ceiling of one of the shower cubicles,” Major Bean said, adding that they “then cut a hole in the roof” to escape the facility, which opened in 2007 with 310 beds. to relieve the overcrowded prisons in the province.

Authorities believe Mr. Bryant was most likely hiding somewhere in the city, said Major Bean, who added that they suspected a network of friends and relatives could help him evade capture.

“There hasn't been a day without a tip,” Major Bean said of Mr. Bryant.

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'Gau Rakshak' found slaughtering cows in UP's Bareilly; Escaped after police encounter https://usmail24.com/gauraksha-karni-sena-gau-rakshak-cow-vigilante-rahul-singh-aides-booked-for-cow-slaughter-in-ups-bareilly-nabbed-in-police-encounter-6653653/ https://usmail24.com/gauraksha-karni-sena-gau-rakshak-cow-vigilante-rahul-singh-aides-booked-for-cow-slaughter-in-ups-bareilly-nabbed-in-police-encounter-6653653/#respond Sat, 13 Jan 2024 19:27:39 +0000 https://usmail24.com/gauraksha-karni-sena-gau-rakshak-cow-vigilante-rahul-singh-aides-booked-for-cow-slaughter-in-ups-bareilly-nabbed-in-police-encounter-6653653/

At home Uttar Pradesh 'Gau Rakshak' found slaughtering cows in UP's Bareilly; Escaped after police encounter A self-styled cow vigilante, Rahul Singh, was arrested for allegedly being involved in cow slaughter in Bareilly district of Uttar Pradesh. Representative image (Pixabay) Uttar Pradesh News: A self-styled 'Gau Rakshak' or cow vigilante, along with four of his […]

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A self-styled cow vigilante, Rahul Singh, was arrested for allegedly being involved in cow slaughter in Bareilly district of Uttar Pradesh.

Representative image (Pixabay)

Uttar Pradesh News: A self-styled 'Gau Rakshak' or cow vigilante, along with four of his aides, was arrested by Bareilly police for his alleged involvement in cow slaughter. The matter came to light after he was found present with three alleged cow smugglers who were arrested by the police after an encounter.

According to police, the suspect, identified as Rahul Singh, was found present along with three cow smugglers – who were nabbed after an encounter with police in Bareilly district on Friday.

Singh, the district president of the Bareilly chapter of the Gauraksha Karni Sena – a self-styled 'cow protection group' involved in alleged cases of cow vigilantism – was found accompanying the accused cow smugglers, police said on Saturday. .

Singh is currently on the run and a manhunt has been launched to arrest him, they said.

A senior police officer said based on information, a police team arrived at Bhojipura area of ​​Bareilly where Rahul Singh, along with four others, was allegedly slaughtering cows near the Devaraniya river.

Police laid siege to the area and asked the accused men to surrender. However, they refused and instead opened fire on the police personnel, prompting retaliation, Circle Officer Harsh Modi told news agency PTI.

“The police fired in retaliation and arrested three persons — Mohammad Saeed Khan, Devendra Kumar and Akram — after the encounter,” officer Modi told news agency PTI.

The officer said that Rahul Singh and another person managed to flee the spot and efforts are on to arrest him, adding that the equipment used for cow slaughter and a pace were seized while arrested trio.

An FIR was registered against the five persons, including Rahul Singh, under relevant sections of the Indian Penal Code at Bhojipura police station on Saturday, said Superintendent of Police (Rural) Mukesh Chandra Mishra.

Further investigation into the case is underway, SP Mishra said.

(With PTI inputs)



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The footballers who escaped one of the most dangerous countries on Earth https://usmail24.com/eritrea-football-escape-afcon/ https://usmail24.com/eritrea-football-escape-afcon/#respond Sat, 13 Jan 2024 00:15:56 +0000 https://usmail24.com/eritrea-football-escape-afcon/

“We see potential spies and enemies everywhere,” says David. “It can be at border control or it can be in a cafe. The other day, a guy was looking at me strangely, so I left without finishing my breakfast, and jumped in a taxi — asking the driver to take me to the wrong address.” […]

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“We see potential spies and enemies everywhere,” says David. “It can be at border control or it can be in a cafe. The other day, a guy was looking at me strangely, so I left without finishing my breakfast, and jumped in a taxi — asking the driver to take me to the wrong address.”

David is an Eritrean footballer, a refugee who thinks government agents are still watching him even though he fled the country a long time ago and is now thousands of miles away.

Though he has claimed asylum abroad, his fears mean that he often sleeps with a chair pressed against the door of his bedroom. Sometimes he will have nightmares about a group of men armed with weapons bursting in and taking him away. 

He lives with the memory of 18 months of training at the Sawa military camp in Eritrea, where, from the age of 15, he was awoken each morning before sunrise and beaten if he did not carry out the orders of his superiors to their liking. There were day-long hikes without food or water and he saw unspeakable violence to women and girls, some of it sexual.

He felt like his future was being stolen from him yet insists he was one of the lucky ones. 

While military service can be an unending indenture of slavery in Eritrea, he was released, he believes, because he had already started to prove his talent as a footballer. Yet there was always the threat of being sent back, even after being called up to play for the Eritrean national team.

After Sawa, he could not stop thinking about getting out of Eritrea, a country that was ranked as the least free state in the world in the 2021 Reporters Without Borders Press Freedom Index, behind North Korea and other countries known for oppressing and jailing journalists.

David says escape became an “obsession”. 

Levels of repression inside the country were getting worse but those trying to leave via its borders were risking indefinite detention. He had heard about underground prisons and a torture chamber known as ‘the oven’ because of the sweltering conditions.

That is why, when he one day travelled abroad to play for Eritrea, he decided to make his move: leaving the team hotel in the middle of the day ostensibly to go shopping for souvenirs. He did not return. He is one of as many as 80 footballers to abscond from the country while in other nations since 2007.

David, whose name has been changed at his request to protect his identity, describes himself as a “patriot” and he insists that he will never experience a greater honour than representing Eritrea as a footballer.

But he thinks he can never go back. 

He will not disclose his name publicly because of the perceived threat to his freedom, nor will he confirm where in the world he has resettled, or whether anyone else from the squad escaped with him while on international duty. He says Eritreans are conditioned to distrust journalists because a free press does not exist in their country and anyone who tries to tell the truth is oppressed.

Though he recognises the importance of telling at least part of his story, he is thin on detail at times because the conversation makes him feel nervous.

When he speaks to The Athletic, he talks quietly. 

He does not want anyone to hear what he is saying.

go-deeper

When the latest Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) starts in the Ivory Coast on Saturday, a team from Eritrea will not be there.

Eritrea have never qualified for a major international tournament but, on this occasion, did not even enter the process after the Confederation of African Football (CAF) confirmed the country did not have a stadium that fulfilled its safety requirements to host home matches.

Nor are Eritrea competing to reach the 2026 World Cup. 

In November, the Eritrean National Football Federation (ENFF) withdrew its entry via a short statement issued by world football’s governing body FIFA and CAF, which said simply that “all of Eritrea’s matches have been cancelled”.


Eritrea, in green, playing against Rwanda in 2012 (AFP via Getty Images)

This decision came after talk of an agreement being reached between ENFF and the Royal Moroccan Football Federation (RMFF) to use that country’s training facilities, which meet CAF standards, before all matches. David interprets Eritrea’s most recent retreat as a reaction from the government fearful of geography, given Morocco’s proximity to Europe and the increased likelihood of more players using the agreement as an opportunity to flee.

“It then becomes an international incident,” says David. “Eritrea does not want the world talking about its problems.”

go-deeper

The last time Eritrea played a competitive, FIFA-recognised game of football, in 2019, they tumbled out of the 2022 World Cup at the qualifying stages after losing over two legs to Namibia. In the same month, four members of the nation’s under-20 side sought asylum in Uganda.

In a sporting sense, the timing of this defection was significant. 

Eritrea had trounced Zanzibar to reach the semi-finals of the CECAFA Under-20 Championship — consisting of national teams from east and central African nations  — when, amid the celebrations and platitudes from government officials back home, the players made their move. This escape involved convincing the ‘minders’ watching over the squad that they had earned the opportunity to go for a walk without unwanted companionship.

Three months later, another seven players from the senior national team absconded in the same country. 

Six of those players have since claimed they were underage when they were forcibly conscripted into the army.


On five occasions since 2009, Eritrean footballers have used the opportunity to seek refuge elsewhere rather than return to a country that is often referred to by Western media as the “North Korea” of Africa.

Permanently mobilised conscripts have been instrumental to the rule of Eritrea’s president, Isaias Afwerki, since the start of the 1990s, when the country gained independence from southern neighbour Ethiopia following a war that lasted 30 years.

Though he initially presented himself as a man of the people, Eritrea has become an authoritarian state under Afwerki, with no national assembly, no constitution or independent judiciary. According to a report produced by the UN Human Rights Council, nearly 40,000 Eritreans tried to cross the Mediterranean Sea to reach Europe in 2014 alone.


A man holds a copy of a newspaper, carrying a report on Eritrean footballers who disappeared from a hotel in 2012 (Isaac Kasamani/AFP via Getty Images)

Two years later, the UN claimed that crimes against humanity had been committed in Eritrea in a “widespread and systematic manner”.

The same report said: “Crimes of enslavement, imprisonment, enforced disappearances, torture, persecution, rape, murder, and other inhumane acts have been committed as part of a campaign to instil fear in, deter opposition from, and, ultimately, to control the Eritrean civilian population.”

By 2018, a peace deal between Eritrea and Ethiopia led to its borders opening and 5,000 people a day leaving the country.

That year, half a million Eritreans fled — a tenth of its population.

Yet footballer David, along with other Eritrean sources who have discussed their experiences with The Athletic on the condition of anonymity, has spoken about the “paranoia” there, where people are sceptical of old international alliances and are, in some cases, thankful to Afwerki for maintaining the country’s sovereignty.

The president retains the support of a mainly older generation having successfully created an image of himself as a besieged leader, successfully combating threatening external forces in the name of independence, while maintaining its key strategic position on the Horn of Africa.

This means that some refugees remain loyal to him, even after resettling following tremendous hardship in their journeys. They say they have not sought a future elsewhere because of Afwerki but because of the actions of other countries, including landlocked Ethiopia, which is threatening to establish a port on Eritrean soil.

Afwerki has informed Eritrean behaviours to such an extent that within expat communities abroad, it is dangerous to discuss politics wherever you happen to live. 

David knows people who have been verbally and physically abused on the street for telling their stories publicly. 

“You never know who is reading, who is listening, what they think, and what they will do with that information,” he says.


The last time Eritrea played a competitive game of football, Mohammed Saeid made his international debut.

Unlike the other footballers featured in this article, he is willing to talk on the record because none of his relatives or friends still live in Eritrea.

His mother and father fled during the country’s war of independence with Ethiopia, which started in 1962.

Saeid was born in Sweden in 1990. His parents initially crossed the Red Sea, to Jeddah in Saudi Arabia, joining thousands of Eritreans in camps. Eventually, they would make it to Norway, before settling in Orebro, a 200-kilometre (124-mile) drive west of Stockholm, the Swedish capital.

He meets The Athletic in a cafe in Birmingham, England’s second-biggest city, where his family relocated almost 20 years ago because of his football talent. 

Saeid joined nearby West Bromwich Albion — thanks largely to the encouragement of Dan Ashworth, who later became a director of elite development with the English Football Association before a hugely successful spell at Brighton & Hove Albion as sporting director, which led to a move to Newcastle United, where he holds the same role.


Saeid talking to The Athletic in Birmingham (Simon Hughes/The Athletic)

Yet Saeid’s entire professional career has been spent away from the country he now calls home. After being released by West Brom, he returned to Sweden, where his performances in midfield for Orebro earned him a deal in 2015 with Major League Soccer’s Columbus Crew.

A first approach to represent Eritrea came around this time. The contact, however, was not from an Eritrean football official. Henok Goitom’s parents were also Eritrean and, aged 31, he was coming towards the end of a playing career which had involved five years in Spain with Murcia, Valladolid and Almeria.

Saeid knew all about Goitom because he was the most famous Eritrean footballer in Sweden, where he’d already played 13 times for the under-21 side. Yet Saeid had never met him, so it was a surprise when suddenly, Goitom started messaging on social media, enquiring whether he would be interested in representing a country he’d never visited. 

In the second game of his international career with Eritrea, Goitom scored in a 3-1 away defeat in Botswana, which ended involvement in the qualifying rounds for the 2018 World Cup.

Goitom was on the plane which returned to Eritrea’s capital Asmara following that match but 10 domestic players did not board, deciding instead to seek refuge in the closest Red Cross centre in Francistown.

Local reports suggested the players were worried about the prospect of military service. It was also reported that the players seeking political asylum had suddenly decided not to work with the lawyers provided by the Eritrean Movement for Democracy and Human Rights (EMDHR) following intimidation from agents representing the Botswana government, which allegedly threatened the footballers by claiming they risked rotting in a camp for illegal immigrants if they accepted the invitation by EMDHR to take their case to court.

After being contacted by The Athletic, EMDHR confirmed that the players had been sent to a remote refugee camp where they were not able to work and their movement was restricted. “It was a big shock to them and they struggled to cope,” a spokesman wrote in an email. 

The resettlement to a different country took years to materialise due to the high refugee influx at the time to Europe, mainly from Syria. This led to three of the footballers giving up hope in the process, instead choosing to move to South Africa where refugees are relatively free to move and work in informal small businesses.


Children playing in Asmara, Eritrea (Christophe Calais/Corbis via Getty Images)

EMDHR confirmed that marriage allowed one of the three to move to Canada, the country six of the seven who stayed in Botswana also eventually settled in. Another went to Australia after getting married.

With Eritrea losing 10 of their best domestic players, they sought solutions in the country’s worldwide diaspora, but only because of the determination of notable figures such as Goitom.

Except, on that occasion, Saeid decided not to join them.

When he saw the travel arrangements, he had started to think twice. The training camp before a run of competitive fixtures lasted a couple of months and would conflict with his professional commitments in MLS.

Though it might have been possible to arrive closer to those games, the journey still involved four flights — more than 50 hours and a couple of days of flying time each way. He accepted it was going to be a tiring trip but the fatigue concerned him. Would he be able to train and then perform to the expected levels after travelling from Columbus in the Midwestern state of Ohio to New York, to Frankfurt in Germany, to Addis Ababa in Ethiopia, and then to Asmara? 

The layovers between some of these flights were tight as well, so he was counting on lots of things falling into place. “When you do your job, you want to do it to the fullest.”


By 2019, Saeid was back in Sweden with a team called Sirius, where he was in contact with more players of Eritrean descent. They communicated on social media and in WhatsApp groups. Lots of them were talking about the prospect of representing their country. Goitom again acted as a conduit, telling the Eritrean federation that as many as 10 Scandinavian-based Eritreans were interested. 

Saeid was getting older, realising that such an opportunity might not come around again. He had never set foot in Eritrea, but he says he acted as a sort of foreman for the country’s football diaspora, encouraging others to join him — even though he did not know what to expect himself. “I did start to ask, ‘Is this actually my job?’.”

This time, the logistical challenge was far simpler: Stockholm to Addis Ababa, then on to Asmara. After landing in Eritrea, he joined a group of players who had been in camp together for several months. He says the sight of so many unfamiliar faces at what was, to them, the late stage of preparations appeared to confuse the domestic Eritrean players, who have limited access to the internet due to government restrictions.

It was clear to Saeid nobody had explained to them that commitments in Europe dictated that clubs only released players for a fortnight at a time under FIFA rules. They began to understand, but it was up to newcomers such as Saeid to try to explain why, rather than any coach or official.

Integration time with new team-mates, however, was limited. Could this have been a deliberate strategy, to keep domestic Eritreans away from their countrymen living abroad, to prevent them from hearing about the supposed riches of Europe? 

Saeid says he will never know but over the week that followed, he spent much of it sitting around for hours in hallways of different government buildings, waiting for this document to be stamped, then another one.

He was there for seven days but it felt like two weeks because of all the waiting, though others travelling from Sweden were grilled more intensely than him. One player had claimed to have a relative still living in Eritrea and this led to the police driving out to a village in the countryside hours away and bringing that person back to Asmara to validate his status.


Eritrea line up for a 2018 match against Botswana (Monirul Bhuiyan/AFP via Getty Images)

Quite why some of the easier details to establish were not dealt with before his trip was never explained. Saeid knows for certain, however, that all of this paperwork was not helpful as he tried to prepare for a vital World Cup qualifier with Namibia. 

His father had recommended he visit one of the old cinemas of Asmara and eat gelato: pastimes from the country’s old Italian colonial days. Yet there was very little time for Saeid to see the country because of the amount of bureaucracy to get through.

Across seven days, he took part in just two training sessions. Confirmation of Saeid’s eligibility only arrived on the day of the game. Of all the players to travel from Stockholm, only he was permitted to feature in the tie’s first leg, but he remained on the substitutes’ bench, watching Eritrea lose 2-1. Though he was disappointed not to get on, he says he did not feel ready to play anyway because the week had been so draining. 

Throughout all of this, nobody from the federation had introduced themselves to him. There had not been a team meeting to go over tactics either. 

For the second leg in Namibia, it has been claimed by the Human Rights Concern group for Eritrea that domestic players had to pay bonds of £5,600 ($7,100) to leave the country.

Though the mood was generally more relaxed, Saeid says he only found out he was making his international debut when some of his team-mates started gossiping during the warm-up. Confirmation came when the FIFA officials in charge of the match inadvertently revealed the team by checking all of the players were wearing the correct shirts. 

“I don’t know why the coach wasn’t involved,” he says. “I’m still not sure whether this is just the culture in Eritrea. It was never explained. We just put on our shirts and went out and played.”

Another defeat meant Eritrea were not going to the World Cup. Yet Saeid was encouraged by the level of ability in the squad and he was excited that his international career had finally started. Yet in the months that followed, 11 of their players claimed asylum in Uganda and the country have not played competitively at any level since. 

Eritrea have no FIFA ranking because they haven’t played a fixture within the governing body’s parameter of 48 months. It is now more than four years since that trip to Namibia and in that time, Saeid says nobody from the federation has contacted him to explain what is going on. 

When it was announced that Eritrea would not compete to qualify for the 2026 World Cup, Saeid found out on social media.

Now aged 33, his most recent club were Trelleborg in the Swedish second division. He says he would love to represent his country again but feels his international career is over.

He remains in a WhatsApp chat group with hundreds of Eritrean footballers based across the world.

“The appetite is there,” he insists. Yet when players ask him about the next steps in terms of contacting the country, he does not know where to send them. “Eritrea has potential, there’s a lot of talent growing, but we are going to lose all of these players because we don’t have a foundation to build from.”


For any Eritrean wanting to escape the country, the only option is the illegal route: risking the border crossing into Ethiopia or Sudan, to the west, before travelling north, trying to reach the Mediterranean via Libya, where the EU has committed close to €100million (£86.3m; $109.5m) on funding the country’s coastguard.

This investment helped circumnavigate international law that states people cannot be returned to countries if their lives are at risk. Instead, after being caught at sea, refugees are taken back to Libya where, between 2017 and 2022, more than 100,000 men, women and children have been locked up, essentially for being there illegally — albeit without any official charges or trials to contest their imprisonment.

Hermon considers himself in the “lucky” category, despite the hardship he has experienced.

To ensure the safety of a small number of family members he left behind in Eritrea, he permits The Athletic to use only his first name and he asks for certain details in the story that follows to be changed to protect the identities of other people connected to him.

Hermon was not an international footballer but his journey illustrates what many people in his country have had to go through in attempting to get out. He was, however, an aspiring footballer, and dreamed of playing in England because of his admiration for Wayne Rooney. He says that was never going to happen if he remained in Eritrea. 

From the age of seven, he worked on a farm and by 13, he faced the prospect of conscription into the army, which, in his words, only considered boys according to whether they were “strong enough to hold a gun”.

He lived in a market town close to the Ethiopian border. His decision to leave was spontaneous: fuelled by a conversation with five friends one night while they were playing football. The town’s population was plummeting and Hermon says that watching his friends go without him would have felt like abandonment, leaving him only with an unending future in the army to contemplate. 

One of his brothers had already left Eritrea, resettling in the Middle East. His success as a businessman acted as a reference point when the going got really tough back home in the subsequent weeks, months and years.

None of the boys told their parents about what they were going to do, and none of them really knew where they were heading. It was an eight-hour walk to the border and Hermon remembers the pangs of excitement and dread when he reached the Tekeze River, which acts as a barrier between Eritrea and Ethiopia. 

His impression of the Ethiopian army was a brutal one because of the country’s relationship with Eritrea. Yet he says they gave him everything he needed: food, water and a place to sleep.

For three months, he was moved between refugee camps. One of them was riddled with malaria, which he contracted. This made him consider returning to Eritrea but his brother’s financial support allowed him to reach Sudan, after paying a smuggler £2,000, half in advance and half on arrival. He says he knows other refugees who lied about the depth of their finances and ended up paying with body parts.

In Sudan, he felt especially vulnerable. There was the threat of Daesh and other armed militant groups. As a Christian, Hermon knew that if Daesh found him, he’d have to convert to Islam or face death. Refugees like him were also targeted by the police for extortion.

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The journey over the desert to the Libyan border took three weeks. There was barely anything to eat or drink and there was no protection from the scorching sun. People died in front of him, of thirst and starvation. The back of the truck he travelled in was packed and if someone fell off, the driver did not stop.

He says he was fortunate that his stay in Libya lasted just a week. In a holding camp outside Tripoli, the capital, some of the refugees were suicidal after years of detention. Many of the men had been beaten, while women were raped and children were tortured. 

The refugees came from all over Africa. Some of them had made it onto a boat, only for it to be seized at sea, and sent back to Libya. Some had been on this demoralising journey more than once. Everyone he met appeared shot psychologically. 

Hermon spent his 14th birthday surrounded by people he did not know, uncertain of where he was heading and when the next leg of that journey would start.

Without his brother’s financial support, he thinks he’d have never made it out of Libya — certainly not as quickly as he did. Within a week, he was on an overcrowded, patched-together vessel drifting across the Mediterranean at night. It took 12 hours to reach the Italian island of Sicily. 

He arrived in the Sicilian city of Catania freezing cold and wet through. In the Cara Mineo refugee camp there, he was told he’d have to stay until he was old enough to leave. Potentially, that would have meant a four-year detention. He decided to break out, paying a Nigerian gang to cut a hole in a fence in the middle of the night. With two other refugees, they rushed north, using taxis, buses and trains to get to the mainland. In Rome, a restaurant owner took pity on him and paid for the travel to Paris.

He had heard of ‘The Jungle’ outside Calais. There, he paid smugglers to take him to Britain by lorry but five months later he was still waiting. He thought of travelling instead to Germany. When the French government started dismantling the camp, he was identified as being underage and this led to him being taken along with around 30 other children to another facility in the south of France, near Toulouse.

At the back of his mind, Hermon still dreamed about becoming a footballer. After three months, he broke out of the camp again in the middle of the night, travelling east to Marseille. He took a train back up to Calais, by which point nearly all of the refugees had left. He hoped that smugglers might still operate from the town of Berck-sur-Mer but no one appeared to be there either. 

As he tried to figure out what to do, a lorry pulled up and parked in front of a bar. He saw an Italian registration number and decided there and then, wherever it took him, he would try and reach England. Since leaving Eritrea, he had always carried a knife with him for protection. This time, he used it to cut through the tarpaulin on the roof of the vehicle, before climbing into a machine, along with two other refugees. 

The journey that followed lasted 14 hours. He could hear he was on a ship. During an inspection, he was able to conceal himself in a footwell. When the back door of the lorry opened, Hermon did not have a clue where he was but he ran, escaping from the confused-looking driver. He arrived in a city, and started looking for Eritrean people. It was clear he was in the United Kingdom but he did not speak the language or even understand the alphabet. 

One of his travelling companions had the phone number of a relative in Manchester and after he communicated with an unsuspecting passerby on the phone, the relative was able to establish he was in Liverpool. Hermon could not believe his fortune. He knew all about Liverpool because of Rooney.

He walked into a Home Office building in the city’s business district loaded only with a few words of English. 

“I am new,” he said, again and again.


In deciding to leave Ethiopia for Sudan, Hermon had left his friends behind. While one of them has remained in that country, two have settled in Egypt and Switzerland. The other boy decided to return to Eritrea and no one has heard from him since.

In Liverpool, Hermon demonstrated enough ability to enrol at a football academy, where he played matches against the youth teams of some of the most famous clubs in England’s north west. Having claimed political asylum, he now combines studying for a degree in business management with a full-time job at a warehouse.

He also now speaks English — with a Scouse accent. 

“Talent is not the problem in Eritrea,” he stresses. “We’d make it into the top 100 in the world if everything made sense. But nothing makes sense.”

(Top photos: Getty Images; design: Eamonn Dalton)

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Under-fire Bill Clinton escaped the fury over the latest revelations in recently released court documents involving pedophile Jeffrey Epstein with a getaway to a luxury resort in Mexico https://usmail24.com/bill-clinton-hillary-clinton-mexico-gavin-newsom-epstein-files-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/ https://usmail24.com/bill-clinton-hillary-clinton-mexico-gavin-newsom-epstein-files-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/#respond Wed, 10 Jan 2024 17:32:24 +0000 https://usmail24.com/bill-clinton-hillary-clinton-mexico-gavin-newsom-epstein-files-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/

Bill and Hillary Clinton have been spotted soaking up the sun at a remote Mexican getaway in the company of California Governor Gavin Newsom and his wife Jennifer. The former president, 77, has been in Latin America since the release of Jeffrey Epstein’s documents began on January 3. He is mentioned several times in the […]

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Bill and Hillary Clinton have been spotted soaking up the sun at a remote Mexican getaway in the company of California Governor Gavin Newsom and his wife Jennifer.

The former president, 77, has been in Latin America since the release of Jeffrey Epstein’s documents began on January 3. He is mentioned several times in the lawsuits – and although he is not accused of any wrongdoing, the documents give off an unwelcome impression. attention to his friendship with the deceased pedophile financier.

One of Epstein’s victims, Johanna Sjoberg, claimed that Epstein told her that Clinton “likes them young, referring to girls.”

Clinton flew on Epstein’s private jet several times and once publicly praised the financier’s intellect and philanthropic efforts.

Sjoberg testified in her deposition that she never met Clinton, and none of Epstein’s victims accused Clinton of sexual impropriety.

A relaxed-looking Bill Clinton, hat on his knee, is seen in a golf cart with the Newsoms at the Four Seasons in Tamarindo, Mexico

Jennifer Newsom, wife of California Governor Gavin Newsom, sits behind Bill Clinton

Jennifer Newsom, wife of California Governor Gavin Newsom, sits behind Bill Clinton

Gavin Newsom, wearing a black baseball cap and black shorts, sits in front of his wife

Gavin Newsom, wearing a black baseball cap and black shorts, sits in front of his wife

Clinton previously said through a spokesperson that he never visited his homes during his trip on Epstein’s plane, had no knowledge of his crimes and has not spoken to Epstein since his conviction in Florida.

Other released documents contain legal arguments about whether Clinton should be impeached. Lawyers for Virginia Roberts-Giuffre — whose legal battle was the source of the court papers — argued that the former president was a “key person who could provide information about his close relationship” with Epstein.

Bill and Hillary Clinton avoided all news of the documents in Mexico and stayed at the luxurious Four Seasons resort in Tamarindo, in the western state of Jalisco.

The secluded hotel, where rooms cost $800 a night, is nestled in a 3,000-acre nature reserve and has a six-mile private beach. It also features a spa, a golf course and a ranch where much of the food for the restaurant is grown and grown.

Bill Clinton is seen on the beach of the exclusive Mexican resort

Bill Clinton is seen on the beach of the exclusive Mexican resort

The resort has a six-mile private beach and rooms cost $800 per night

The resort has a six-mile private beach and rooms cost $800 per night

The Clintons were seen riding a golf cart with Newsom, and the couples had dinner together.

Newsom has been friends with the Clintons for years and wished Bill a happy birthday on Facebook in 2016.

“Happy 70th President Bill Clinton!” he posted.

‘Grateful for your leadership and your friendship. Here’s to many more years of pointing out the value of “arithmetic!”

Before traveling to Tamarindo, Clinton was spotted strolling the streets of the popular tourist town of San Miguel de Allende, in Guanajuato, 500 miles inland from the beach town.

Mayor Mauricio Trejo Pureco shared a photo of Clinton in front of the parish of San Miguel Arcángel on social media.

In a tweet, Pureco welcomed him, saying: ‘Even Bill Clinton walks calmly and safely through the streets of San Miguel de Allende, enjoying the unique beauty and friendliness of the people of San Miguel de Allende.

“Welcome Mr. President! That’s why we are [the] best little town in the world!!!’

Clinton was captured along with tourists in the main square of San Miguel de Allende, Guanajuato

Clinton was captured along with tourists in the main square of San Miguel de Allende, Guanajuato

Bill Clinton greets Ghislaine Maxwell and Jeffrey Epstein at the White House in 1993

Bill Clinton greets Ghislaine Maxwell and Jeffrey Epstein at the White House in 1993

Clinton was pictured next to his wife Hillary, 76, as well as former presidents of Chile, Sebastián Piñera, second from right, and Mexico, Enrique Pena Nieto (third from left).  The photo is dated December 29 in Punta Cana, Dominican Republic

Clinton was pictured next to his wife Hillary, 76, as well as former presidents of Chile, Sebastián Piñera, second from right, and Mexico, Enrique Pena Nieto (third from left). The photo is dated December 29 in Punta Cana, Dominican Republic

Clinton was also in the Dominican Republic over the holidays.

On December 29, he was pictured with his wife Hillary, 76; the former president of Chile, Sebastián Piñera; and former President of Mexico Enrique Pena-Nieto.

The photo was taken in Punta Cana, Dominican Republic.

The image of the couple next to Piñera was shared by Frank Elías Rainieri, a hotelier in the Dominican Republic.

Hillary Clinton was not known to spend time with Jeffrey Epstein, but her husband had been a friend since at least 1993.

The pedophile financier made at least 17 visits to the White House, presidential logs show, and Bill Clinton also flew on Epstein’s private jet and made trips to Europe, Asia and Africa in 2002 and 2003.

Bill Clinton’s spokesperson Angel Urena said in July 2019, when Jeffrey Epstein was arrested, that he knows “nothing about the terrible crimes” Epstein was accused of, and that Clinton had not spoken to Epstein “in more than a decade.”

Bill Clinton is pictured with Jeffrey Epstein in an undated photo

Bill Clinton is pictured with Jeffrey Epstein in an undated photo

It is unclear how Clinton and Epstein met.

On January 3, hours before the court documents were unsealed, Jeffrey Epstein’s brother Mark, a New York-based real estate developer, said his sibling claimed to have information about Donald Trump and Bill Clinton that was so explosive it could have changed the 2016 presidential election. would derail.

Mark Epstein, 18 months younger than Jeffrey, said his brother never provided details.

Mark, 69, told The New York Post: “Here’s a direct quote: ‘If I told them what I know about both candidates, they would have to cancel the election.’ Jeffrey told me that in 2016.’

Hillary Clinton was not known to spend time with Jeffrey Epstein, but her husband had been a friend since at least 1993.

Epstein and Maxwell were pictured greeting Bill Clinton at the White House in 1993, during an event for donors to the White House Historical Association. Epstein attended the event after donating $10,000 to the fund.

The pedophile financier made at least 17 visits to the White House, presidential logs show, and Bill Clinton also flew on Epstein’s private jet and made trips to Europe, Asia and Africa in 2002 and 2003.

Mark Epstein said flying with Bill Clinton was a crucial mistake by his brother because it suddenly thrust his activities into the spotlight.

“Jeff first took Clinton, and I think it was Chris Tucker and a few other people, to Africa – which was a mistake my brother made in that, because he was under the radar before that; no one was looking at him.

“But when he flew Clinton there, I thought, ‘Who is this guy flying Clinton?’

Bill Clinton’s spokesperson Angel Urena said in July 2019, when Jeffrey Epstein was arrested, that he knows “nothing about the terrible crimes” Epstein was accused of, and that Clinton had not spoken to Epstein “in more than a decade.”

There is no evidence that Clinton ever visited Epstein’s Caribbean island, Little St. James.

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Why two women were in Gympie’s ‘love tunnel’ storm drain when they died from flooding – while a third mate narrowly escaped with her life https://usmail24.com/gympie-love-tunnel-drowning-boxing-day-storms-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/ https://usmail24.com/gympie-love-tunnel-drowning-boxing-day-storms-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/#respond Fri, 29 Dec 2023 01:25:12 +0000 https://usmail24.com/gympie-love-tunnel-drowning-boxing-day-storms-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/

Two women explored an infamous ‘love tunnel’ before being swept to their deaths by floods – while a third female companion barely escaped with her life. Helen Bradford, 40, and Tanya Hehir, 46, were exploring the 2.4km tunnel near the Queensland town of Gympie, north of Brisbane, when they became involved in wild weather caused […]

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Two women explored an infamous ‘love tunnel’ before being swept to their deaths by floods – while a third female companion barely escaped with her life.

Helen Bradford, 40, and Tanya Hehir, 46, were exploring the 2.4km tunnel near the Queensland town of Gympie, north of Brisbane, when they became involved in wild weather caused by ‘cyclonic’ Boxing Day storms.

The pair were washed back down the drain into the Mary River, while a third woman, 40, was able to reach safety despite her injuries and call for help.

A major rescue operation was launched with the state emergency service, water police, police divers and helicopters assisting in searches.

Mrs Bradford’s body was found by swift water crews at the entrance to the tunnel at Kidd Bridge at around 7.10pm on Tuesday. Ms Hehir’s body was recovered near Gympie Weir on Wednesday afternoon.

Locals reminisced about time spent in the ‘love tunnel’ – an iconic local stormwater system and favorite among teenagers in the Gympie region.

Residents said the tunnel was an ancient meeting place where teenagers could explore for hours without the prying eyes of their parents.

“I couldn’t count how many times we walked through there as kids,” one said.

The photo shows Tanya Hehir, 46

The women were washed back into the Mary River down the drain, while a third woman, 40, was able to jump to safety and call for help despite moderate head injuries.

Locals reminisced about time spent in the love tunnel (pictured) after a photo of the stormwater drain was posted on a Gympie community page in 2021

Locals reminisced about time spent in the love tunnel (pictured) after a photo of the stormwater drain was posted on a Gympie community page in 2021

“My father threatened me with death if he caught me there,” wrote a second.

A third commented: ‘I would spend hours there… so dark I couldn’t even see your hand in front of your face.’

“Go in for love, come out with tetanus,” wrote a fourth.

The 2.4 km long tunnel stretches from the banks of the Mary River to the city center.

According to locals, the drain has two exits: one near the Gympie Civic Center and the other near Cullinanes Plaza.

Mrs. Bradford worked at the Coffee Club and was an avid cyclist, runner and hiker who enjoyed climbing mountains and following wilderness trails.

Ms Hehir was also an avid runner and outdoor enthusiast who had hiked the iconic World War II Kokoda trail in Papua New Guinea.

Both women were mothers and Ms Hehir had two children.

Residents said the Gympie Love Tunnel (pictured) was an ancient meeting place where teenagers could explore for hours without the prying eyes of their parents

Residents said the Gympie Love Tunnel (pictured) was an ancient meeting place where teenagers could explore for hours without the prying eyes of their parents

Pictured L-R: Victims David 'Mario' Logan, Mia Holland-McCormack and Stephen 'Taity' Tait

Pictured L-R: Victims David ‘Mario’ Logan, Mia Holland-McCormack and Stephen ‘Taity’ Tait

Mia Holland-McCormack, 9, (pictured) died on Boxing Day after being swept away by flooding as she jumped the fence of her family's Rochester South home

Mia Holland-McCormack, 9, (pictured) died on Boxing Day after being swept away by flooding as she jumped the fence of her family’s Rochester South home

A total of seven Queenslanders and three Victorians died in the storms.

The youngest victim of the ‘mini-cyclones’ that hit southeast Queensland was nine-year-old Mia Holland-McCormack, who fell into a drain on Boxing Day.

Mia, who was severely autistic, was reported missing earlier that afternoon after jumping the fence of her home in Rochedale South, south-east Brisbane.

Earlier on Thursday, the third victim of a shipping tragedy caused by the ‘mini cyclone’ was identified as 48-year-old Robert Holden.

Holden died along with former Queensland rugby players David Logan and Stephen Tait when their boat capsized in Brisbane’s Moreton Bay on Boxing Day.

Robert Holden (pictured with wife Michelle) has been identified as the third victim of a boat capsizing during wild storms on Boxing Day

Robert Holden (pictured with wife Michelle) has been identified as the third victim of a boat capsizing during wild storms on Boxing Day

Mr Holden is remembered as a 'great man who always put the needs of others before himself'

Mr Holden is remembered as a ‘great man who always put the needs of others before himself’

The deceased men were part of a group of 11 friends who were thrown into the water off Green Island when 60mph winds hit the area, blocking visibility.

While the eight others on board were rescued, the bodies of Mr Logan, Mr Tait and Mr Holden could only be recovered in the aftermath of the storm.

Queensland Police Acting Chief Inspector Andrew Pilotto said it would have been a terrible last few moments for the three men.

“There were reports of people seeing it happen… but the conditions were horrific and visibility was limited to a few metres,” he said.

“I know the wind was over 60 miles an hour…I’ve been out on the bay about half the time and the swell is crazy. I imagine it was great.’

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Urgent manhunt for three prisoners who escaped from prison: DO NOT approach https://usmail24.com/urgent-manhunt-three-inmates-escaped-jail-not-approach-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/ https://usmail24.com/urgent-manhunt-three-inmates-escaped-jail-not-approach-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/#respond Wed, 22 Nov 2023 20:59:39 +0000 https://usmail24.com/urgent-manhunt-three-inmates-escaped-jail-not-approach-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/

By Kylie Stevens for Daily Mail Australia Published: 3:41 PM EST, November 22, 2023 | Updated: 3:42 PM EST, November 22, 2023 Three prisoners behind bars for serious crimes are on the run after escaping from a north Queensland prison. Trent Darby Ryan, 34, Daimien Gary Richard Izzard, 28 and Dallas Wayne Quakawoot, 22 escaped […]

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Three prisoners behind bars for serious crimes are on the run after escaping from a north Queensland prison.

Trent Darby Ryan, 34, Daimien Gary Richard Izzard, 28 and Dallas Wayne Quakawoot, 22 escaped from the Townsville Correctional Center on Wednesday.

Police and corrective services officers have launched a desperate manhunt for the refugees.

Ryan is serving a 15-month prison sentence for assault occasioning actual bodily harm.

Trent Darby Ryan, 34, is one of three inmates who escaped from the Townsville Correctional Center on Wednesday

Izzard will serve two and a half years for driving under the influence of alcohol or other substances.

Quakawoot was sentenced to four years in prison for armed robbery.

If you see these men, do not approach them and contact Triple Zero.

Ryan is 175 cm tall, mEdium build, dark skin color with brown eyes and black hair.

He also has a number of distinctive tattoos, including his surname on his chest, a teardrop on his left eye, an Aboriginal flag on his left hand and a spider web on his right hand.

Daimie Gary Richard Izzard, 28

Dallas Wayne Quakawoot, 22

Daimien Gary Richard Izzard, 28, and Dallas Wayne Quakawoot, 22, are also on the run

Izzard is 172 cm tall, medium build, light skin tone, light brown eyes and brown hair. He also has many striking tattoos.

Quakawoot is 171 cm tall, medium build, brown skin color, brown eyes and black hair. He has a cross tattoo on his wrist.

Anyone with more information about the whereabouts of the men can also call Policelink or Crime Stoppers.

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‘Princes in the Tower’ may have escaped prison and fled to Europe rather than be killed, new evidence suggests https://usmail24.com/princes-tower-escaped-imprisonment-fled-europe-instead-killed-bombshell-new-evidence-suggests-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/ https://usmail24.com/princes-tower-escaped-imprisonment-fled-europe-instead-killed-bombshell-new-evidence-suggests-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/#respond Fri, 17 Nov 2023 08:38:02 +0000 https://usmail24.com/princes-tower-escaped-imprisonment-fled-europe-instead-killed-bombshell-new-evidence-suggests-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/

It is currently believed that the princes were murdered by their uncle, Richard III By Katherine Lawton and Harry Howard, History Correspondent Published: 8:06 PM EST, November 16, 2023 | Updated: 03:35 EST, November 17, 2023 The Princes in the Tower may have escaped prison and fled to Europe rather than be killed, new evidence […]

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  • It is currently believed that the princes were murdered by their uncle, Richard III

The Princes in the Tower may have escaped prison and fled to Europe rather than be killed, new evidence suggests.

This contrasts with the dominant belief that the two boys, 12-year-old King Edward V and his nine-year-old brother Richard, were murdered by their uncle Richard III in his attempt to get closer to the throne.

Shakespeare dramatizes this theory in his famous play about the Machiavellian king, in which Richard orders his young relatives murdered in the Tower of London.

Amateur historian Philippa Langley, who found Richard’s remains under a car park in Leicester, has now revealed a series of ‘extraordinary discoveries’ that support her theory that the princes escaped.

She will present her findings in a Channel 4 documentary on Saturday. In The Princes in the Tower: The New Evidence, Ms. Langley speaks of “surprising discoveries” she has made after seven years of research.

She believes that a pair of boys who were dismissed as pretenders to the throne – Lambert Simnel and Perkin Warbeck – were the real princes.

These boys each made unsuccessful attempts to depose Henry VII towards the end of the 15th century.

The Princes in the Tower (pictured) may have escaped prison and fled to Europe rather than be killed, new evidence suggests

Edward V – who was never crowned – and his brother were the sons of King Edward IV, who died in 1483.

After being declared illegitimate heirs by Richard III, then Duke of Gloucester, the two princes were taken to the Tower of London and subsequently disappeared from the historical record.

For years, experts have wanted to test the remains of four children – two of which were found in the Tower of London in the 17th century and two in the grounds of Windsor Castle in the 18th century – in the hope that some of Edward and Richard might be are.

However, it was believed that the late Queen Elizabeth II blocked any investigation on the grounds that the bodies had long been buried in royal crypts.

Ms Langley said documents from European archives point to the princes’ escape and later attempts to invade England.

One piece of evidence is an apparent witness statement from Richard, who was nine when he disappeared.

Written ten years later, the author remembers being taken from the tower by Henry and Thomas Percy.

‘They shaved my hair and put me in a shabby and boring shirt and we went to St Katharine’s [dock],” the document reads.

In Shakespeare's play Richard III, the Machiavellian royal family has his two cousins ​​murdered in the Tower of London (pictured) in an attempt to get closer to the throne

In Shakespeare’s play Richard III, the Machiavellian royal family has his two cousins ​​murdered in the Tower of London (pictured) in an attempt to get closer to the throne

The account then says that they took the boat to go to Boulogne-sur-Mer before traveling to Portugal.

Experts have determined that it was written during that period.

Another document from 1483, which appears to bear the signature of ‘Richard, Duke of York’, says that Richard will pay 30,000 florins to Duke Albert of Saxony within a few months of landing on the English throne.

Philippa Langley and Rob Rinder front Channel 4’s new Princes in the Tower documentary.

The Princes in the Tower: The New Evidence airs on Saturday at 8pm on Channel 4.

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Captured! The escaped circus lion is eventually captured and tranquilized before being loaded into the car after wandering the streets near Rome for seven hours https://usmail24.com/lion-escaped-circus-captured-sedated-rome-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/ https://usmail24.com/lion-escaped-circus-captured-sedated-rome-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/#respond Sun, 12 Nov 2023 13:39:25 +0000 https://usmail24.com/lion-escaped-circus-captured-sedated-rome-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/

Big cat named Kimba escaped from Rony Roller Circus in Ladispoli, Lazio Locals were told to stay in their homes while authorities tried to capture the lion By Gina Kalsi and Ryan Prosser Published: 7:50 AM EST, November 12, 2023 | Updated: 08:07 EST, November 12, 2023 Footage showed the moment a lion was captured […]

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  • Big cat named Kimba escaped from Rony Roller Circus in Ladispoli, Lazio
  • Locals were told to stay in their homes while authorities tried to capture the lion

Footage showed the moment a lion was captured after escaping from a circus and spotted walking down a street near Rome.

The animal, named Kimba, was tied up, tranquilized and then loaded into a van.

It is still unknown how the big cat escaped from Circus Rony Roller, where it was eventually returned.

A terrified local resident shared a video on X, formerly known as Twitter, of the animal walking through the streets of Ladispoli, home to around 40,000 people.

The woman filming could be heard saying “Mamma mia” as the lion, fleeing a circus, walked confidently down the quiet road.

Some people were even trapped in their cars. One resident uploaded a video showing the animal walking past his vehicle, with blue emergency lights flashing in the background.

Locals were told by authorities to stay in their homes while they tried to catch the big cat.

The mayor of Ladispoli, Alessandro Grando, told locals: ‘A lion has escaped from the circus. Please pay close attention and avoid traveling until further notice.’

Footage showed the moment a lion was captured after escaping from a circus and seen walking down a street near Rome

Locals were told by authorities to stay in their homes as they tried to catch the big cat, known as Kimba

Locals were told by authorities to stay in their homes as they tried to catch the big cat, known as Kimba

A terrified local shared the shocking footage on X, formerly known as Twitter, which showed the animal walking through the streets of Ladispoli, home to around 40,000 people.

A terrified local shared the shocking footage on X, formerly known as Twitter, which showed the animal walking through the streets of Ladispoli, home to around 40,000 people.

A shocking video has captured the moment an escaped lion casually walks down a residential street in Rome

A shocking video has captured the moment an escaped lion casually walks down a residential street in Rome

It took authorities about seven hours to capture the lion and he had to be shot twice with tranquilizers the first time he woke up, according to a local news channel. Corriere della Sera.

The site reported that the lion was able to escape several times and was believed to have been caught and stunned for the first time between Vialle Mediterraneo and Via Nicosia at 3:00 PM CET.

It then managed to get away again and was tranquilized a second time at 8.30pm before finally being captured by police at 10pm.

Hit by complaints from residents, Mr. Grando said he had not authorized an animal circus in their town, but also that he could not block it.

He said the city had tried to ban them in 2017 but lost the case at the Lazio Regional Administrative Court.

He confirmed the big cat’s capture on Facebook, writing: ‘The lion was tranquilized and captured. Now it is taken over by the circus staff.

“Thank you State Police, Carabinieri, firefighters, local and provincial police, ASL and all the volunteers who served during these hours of great learning.

“I hope that this episode can awaken the conscience and that we can finally put an end to the exploitation of animals in circuses.”

The post Captured! The escaped circus lion is eventually captured and tranquilized before being loaded into the car after wandering the streets near Rome for seven hours appeared first on USMAIL24.COM.

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