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Policeman, 24, dies after being hit by car
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A policeman has died after being hit by a car while responding to a collision.
PC Faizaan Najeeb, 24, was critically injured after he was hit by the blue VW Polo on 19 September.
He was responding to a single vehicle collision in Station Road, Raunds, Northamptonshire, at around 12.35am.
PC Najeeb was rushed to hospital but was pronounced dead earlier on Friday.
A man in his 20s was arrested at the scene of the collision and has been bailed by police, pending further investigation.
PC Najeeb had joined Northamptonshire Police in May 2022 and had served with the Response team in Wellingborough since.
His collar number P1967, as is tradition for officers who die on duty, will be retired in his memory.
Chief Constable Ivan Balhatchet, who announced the news on Friday, said: “Words cannot describe the sadness felt when an officer loses his life serving in the line of duty.
“The entire Northamptonshire Police family wish to pass on our deepest condolences to his family and friends at this truly awful point in time.
“Colleagues from the Serious Collision Investigation Unit are still investigating the collision, and specialist family liaison officers will continue to support Faizaan’s family in the coming days and weeks.
“We are also carrying out an internal health and safety investigation.”
Breaking News
Guinea Supreme Court confirms vote to change constitution
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Guinea’s Supreme Court confirmed the result of a referendum to approve a new constitution in the junta-ruled country, saying it was backed by an overwhelming majority of voters.
The final tallies – 89.38% in favour and 10.62% against – confirmed the provisional vote results announced on Tuesday evening.
Opposition parties had called on voters to boycott last Sunday’s referendum, accusing General Mamady Doumbouya of using it to stay in power.
Earlier, they had filed a request to the court to annul the result. The request was rejected.
The court’s confirmation paves the way for elections to be held in December.
The signs suggest that Mr Doumbouya will run for the presidency, despite an earlier promise that he would not.
Guinea, an impoverished nation in west Africa, has long been blighted by coups and violence from authoritarian regimes.
When the military toppled President Alpha Conde in 2021, they initially said they would return the country to civilian rule by 2024, before reneging on that commitment.
United Nations rights chief Volker Turk called on the military regime to lift bans on opposition parties and media outlets.
He also criticised what he said was a broader assault on fundamental rights in Guinea since the coup, referring to a rise in arbitrary arrests and enforced disappearances.
Breaking News
Dating app sex assault victim urges others to seek immediate help
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Kevin SharkeyBBC News NI
A student who was sexually assaulted after meeting a man on a dating app has appealed to other survivors to seek immediate help to ensure there’s a record of the abuse.
The woman, who was 20 at the time, was attacked during a short-term relationship after she moved to Belfast to begin her university studies.
Last year, 25-year-old Fearghall Joseph Mulgrew, of Mullaghmoyle Road in Stewartstown, County Tyrone was jailed after pleading guilty to sexually and physically assaulting the woman.
Sophie, not her real name, believes her attendance at a sexual assault referral centre afterwards was crucial to the prosecution.
- Warning: Some readers may find parts of this article distressing
A judge at Belfast Crown Court said Mulgrew subjected the woman to a “degrading and frightening” experience, and he used her “as a sexual toy whose personal integrity and feelings were entirely subservient to your sexual desires”.
He was given a 22-month sentence in April 2024, serving 14 months on licence.
The court was told Mulgrew was a student in Belfast when he initially met the woman on the dating app Tinder in March 2021.
They agreed that the woman would come to his accommodation for “rough” intercourse at 03:00 GMT.
The woman said it was not something she had done before, but she agreed to try it, and the pair had consensual sex.
‘He wanted to do things his way’
The victim, who wishes to remain anonymous, has now spoken about her ordeal and explained that they had been in a casual relationship for about a month.
“The day of the incident he’d made it clear that he wanted to do things his way which included rough sexual contact. I hadn’t quite expected it to be what it was,” she told BBC News NI.
“He bit me, you know, in intimate areas where I had to kick him to get him off, to get him to stop, and even though we had a safe word he made it very obvious that that wasn’t even going to work, and he held my mouth closed with his teeth so I couldn’t say anything.
“That’s what sticks with me the most, the biting, it was all over my face.”
Reporting to police
Sophie, who has since left Northern Ireland, went to the Rowan sexual assault referral centre for help soon afterwards but she did not report the incident to the police until almost a year later.
She now believes her attendance at the centre was crucial to the subsequent prosecution of her abuser.
“I would advise that, even if you don’t know, because sometimes you can be so confused and so in shock that you don’t know but you think, then just get yourself looked at.
“For me, if I hadn’t gone to the Rowan, me reporting to the police would have been 100% more difficult. They wouldn’t have had my statement from the time, they wouldn’t have had photographs, and they wouldn’t have had all the swabs and things that they took.
“That evidence is invaluable especially if you are going into court,” she said.
How are police tackling violence against women?
It has been three years since the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) launched an action plan to tackle violence against women and girls (VAWG).
The PSNI said it had made 5,042 arrests by the end of August 2025 under new legislation and conducted hundreds of targeted patrols.
They said they have also put in place four stalking protection orders using the new laws.
Each month, 84 arrests have been made on average for domestic abuse, there have been an average of 19 arrests each month for the offences of stalking, threatening and abusive behaviour, and 76 arrests each month for non-fatal strangulation.
In the 12 months to July 2025 there were 21,729 violence against women and girls (VAWG) offences recorded – a reduction of 4% compared to the previous 12 months.
Det Ch Insp Leah Crothers, one of the PSNI’s tackling VAWG leads, said they “remain committed to doing everything” they can to prevent harm and call out unacceptable attitudes and behaviours.
“We have always been clear that it will take a societal effort to make a real change,” she added.
“Tackling violence against women and girls requires commitment from all — where perpetrators are held to account, communities stand together, and we work with partners to make every space safe. This remains our goal.”
Sophie said “too many men had blurred lines of consent and a misogynistic view on life”.
“I and so many other young women have suffered because of this. I am standing up to say it is not right and the only way to put a stop to it is to educate men and boys and for women like me to feel supported enough to report.”
If you are affected by domestic abuse, there is a range of support services available via the BBC’s Action Line page.
Breaking News
King and Queen set to meet Pope Leo in Vatican state visit
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The King and Queen will meet the new Pope during a state visit to Vatican City next month.
The couple will join Leo XIV, who was elected pope earlier this year after the death of Pope Francis, in late October to celebrate the 2025 jubilee year, Buckingham Palace said.
The Catholic Church typically marks a papal jubilee every 25 years.
Charles and Camilla‘s visit is expected to celebrate the ecumenical work by the Church of England and the Catholic Church, reflecting the Jubilee year’s theme of walking together as “Pilgrims of Hope”.
The King is Supreme Governor of the Church of England, a role which dates back to Henry VIII, who named himself Supreme Head of the Church of England after he was excommunicated by Pope Paul III and broke from the Catholic Church in the 16th century to marry Anne Boleyn.
The King and Queen had a meeting with Pope Francis just 12 days before he died.
Their historic state visit to the Vatican in early April was cancelled due to the then-pontiff’s poor health, but they managed to visit him privately during their trip to Italy.
The meeting with Francis, in what would be the final weeks of his life, was arranged at the last minute and took place on their 20th wedding anniversary on 9 April, with the pontiff wanting to personally wish them a happy anniversary.
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In an official message released following the news of Francis’s death on 21 April, the King said he and the Queen were “most deeply saddened”.
In May, Charles sent a private message to Pope Leo XIV congratulating him on his election, Buckingham Palace said.
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