Arab Times

Teen jailed for acid attacks:

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Military personnel wearing protective coveralls look at a map while others load a car onto a military vehicle in a cordoned off area behind a police station in Salisbury, southern England, on March 11, as investigat­ions and operations continue in connection with the major incident sparked after a man and a woman were apparently

poisoned in a nerve agent attack a week ago. (AFP)

A spokesman for Prime Minister Theresa May said earlier that Britain was still confident it could reach agreement with the EU on a transition period after Brexit at the EU summit this month. (RTRS)

Sellner said in a video posted on Twitter they were detained for three days and deported.

British officials didn’t immediatel­y confirm the deportatio­ns.

Sellner said on the video that both of them were handcuffed. He said he had planned to give a speech at “Speakers’ Corner” in London’s Hyde Park. He said “that was my crime.”

Pettibone said that she was denied entry because she had plans to interview far-right leader Tommy Robinson.

She said from Austria that “It felt like they were saying, ‘you’re right-wing, that’s not allowed.” (AP)

A British teenager who sprayed acid into the faces of six motorcycli­sts during a twohour robbery spree in London was jailed for 10-1/2 years on Monday.

Derryck John, 17, threw the corrosive liquid through the visors of motorcycli­sts in an attempt to blind them and steal their scooters - escaping twice with vehicles which he hid before returning to attempt more robberies, prosecutor­s said.

The use of acid in street attacks in Britain has risen sharply over the past two years, prompting the government to limit the sale of sulphuric acid and ban children from buying it.

John was the passenger on a moped, driven by an unidentifi­ed person, and carried out the attacks across East London last July.

“One of the victims has lost 30 percent of his eyesight which he will never recover - others described searing pain and burning at the time and have been forced to leave their jobs as a result of their injuries,” said Ramesh Patel, of the Crown Prosecutio­n Service. “Had they not been wearing helmets, all of the victims’ injuries could have been much more serious,” Patel added in a statement.

Detective Sergeant James Leeks said in a police statement on the case: “Acid attacks ruin lives and have no place in our society.

“It beggars belief that anyone would be prepared to scar someone for life and leave them to live with life-changing injuries for the sake of a phone or a moped.” (RTRS)

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