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HSE to take over private nursing home in Kerry next week

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A 35-bed nursing home in Camp, Co Kerry is to be taken over by the HSE in five days’ time.

In a statement, the Health Information and Quality Authority (Hiqa) said the HSE would take charge of the centre from September 11th next.

“Hiqa’s chief inspector of social services made a decision to cancel the registration of Aperee Living Camp arising from serious concerns about the governance and management of the centre, and the impact on the care and welfare of residents,” it said.

In September 2023 Hiqa highlighted financial concerns about the Camp facility and raised “serious concerns” about the management of money belonging to residents in the nursing home run by Aperee.

Hiqa said the Tralee nursing home had a “significant” list of creditors, several of whom had refused to provide further services until they were paid.

In a separate statement on Friday, HSE Cork Community Healthcare said it had been notified by Hiqa that it had cancelled the registration of Aperee Living, Camp, Co Kerry as an approved residential care provider.

“We wish to assure everyone that our focus at this time is ensuring the welfare of the residents at this private nursing home during this difficult time for the residents, their loved ones and staff.

“We are liaising with Aperee Living Camp and Hiqa and we will take interim charge of the nursing home next Wednesday.

The Aperee group has been asked for comment.



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Exclusive: Labour Benefit Cap Rebels Warned They Face Fresh Crackdown As Winter Fuel Payment Vote Looms

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Seven MPs suspended by Labour could face a fresh crackdown by party bosses if they vote against the government’s decision to means test winter fuel payments, HuffPost UK can reveal.

John McDonnell, Richard Burgon, Zarah Sultana, Ian Byrne, Apsana Begum, Imran Hussain and Rebecca Long-Bailey had the party whip taken off them for six months in July after they defied Keir Starmer to back calls for the two child benefit cap to be scrapped.

However, they are still expected to vote with the government while they serve their suspension.

A party source said: “Their suspension letter says they are still expected to follow the Labour whip, which they are sent weekly.”

Ministers have agree to a Commons vote next Tuesday on chancellor Rachel Reeves’ controversial decision to remove winter fuel payments from around 10 million pensioners.

Two of the seven rebels – McDonnell and Sultana – have already said they are prepared to vote against the government again unless ministers water down their plans.

Four others – Burgon, Hussain, Byrne and Begum – have also signed a Commons motion calling on ministers to U-turn.

Sultana told HuffPost UK: “I’m planning to vote to keep pensioners out of fuel poverty as I did with voting to lift the two child benefit cap to keep children out of poverty.

“I look forward to the process about the whip concluding in January.”

McDonnell said: “I have told the whips that unless the government comes up with a serious change in its proposal, I will vote against.”

But HuffPost UK has learned that if they do vote against the government, they are unlikely to get the Labour whip back when their current suspension ends in January.

A Labour source said: “It is a shame that some MPs who were only too happy to ride the coat tails of the party’s success at the election are now using the incredibly difficult things we have to do to yet again undermine the government and their colleagues.

“If they are more comfortable hanging out with Jeremy Corbyn and his friends, they should just be honest about it.”

Labour insiders fear as many as 20 of the party’s MPs could rebel on Tuesday, however at this stage there are no plans to take the whip off them.





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We have stopped Russia in the east, claims top Ukraine general – Ukraine: The Latest podcast

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Today, we bring you the latest news from the front lines, analyse the latest developments in Russia with former British Defence Attache John Foreman and we interview the director of a new documentary series, The Zelensky Story.

Listen to Ukraine: the Latest, The Telegraph’s daily podcast, using the audio player at the top of this article or on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favourite podcast app.


War in Ukraine is reshaping our world. Every weekday The Telegraph’s top journalists analyse the invasion from all angles – military, humanitarian, political, economic, historical – and tell you what you need to know to stay updated.

With over 70 million listens, our Ukraine: The Latest podcast is your go-to source for all the latest analysis, live reaction and correspondents reporting on the ground. We have been broadcasting ever since the full-scale invasion began.

Ukraine: The Latest’s regular contributors are:

David Knowles

David is Senior Audio Journalist & Presenter at The Telegraph, where he has worked for over three years. He has reported from across Ukraine during the full-scale invasion. 

Dominic Nicholls

Dom is Associate Editor (Defence) at The Telegraph, having joined in 2018. He previously served for 23 years in the British Army, in tank and helicopter units. He had operational deployments in Iraq, Afghanistan and Northern Ireland. 

Francis Dearnley

Francis is Assistant Comment Editor at The Telegraph. Prior to working as a journalist, he was chief of staff to the Chair of the Prime Minister’s Policy Board at the Houses of Parliament in London. He studied History at Cambridge University and on the podcast explores how the past shines a light on the latest diplomatic, political, and strategic developments.

They are also regularly joined by Telegraph reporters and correspondents around the world, including Joe Barnes (Brussels Correspondent), James Kilner, (Foreign Correspondent and Editor of the Central Asia & the South Caucasus Bulletin), Sophia Yan (Senior Foreign Correspondent), Roland Oliphant (Senior Foreign Correspondent), Colin Freeman (Foreign Correspondent), Danielle Sheridan (Defence Editor), and Tony Diver (US Editor).



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Prisons crisis: Could UK offenders be sent to Estonia? …The Standard podcast

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Here’s How Much Of Cinemas’ Income Comes From Popcorn, And I’m Aghast

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I take issue with how some Boomers talk about housing; “Just give up brunch and Netflix and you’ll have a home in five years,” they (wrongly) advise younger people.

Well, I stand by my objection, but it seems I’ve become a little out-of-touch on another topic myself.

Maybe it’s because I grew up near one of Ireland’s absolute cheapest cinemas, but I hadn’t quite realised how pricey the five-pound-plus snack has become until I took a rare trip to the big screen recently.

While I followed the scent of freshly popped corn to the counter like a cartoon elephant drawn to a bun, my friend stood aghast ― “There’s no way we’re buying popcorn,” she said.

Looking at its price, I realised why. But how come it’s so dear to begin with?

There is a method to the madness

Researchers at Stanford Graduate School of Business (GSB) and the University of California (UC) wrote a paper stating that, though it’s painful, the prices do make sense.

That’s because, while only 20% of cinemas’ revenue comes from concessions (food, drink, and other non-ticket products), it accounts for a whopping 40% of their revenue.

Confused? I was too ― but it turns out that not all of the ticket revenue goes to the cinema. Instead, they share it with movie distributors.

The Stanford GSB and UC study also found that “die-hard” movie fans, who simply love going to the cinema, proportionally pay more for concessions ― low-traffic weeks, where bums were not hitting theatres’ seats, saw a higher proportion of snack profits than higher-traffic weeks.

That means ticket prices can stay lower, as people other than cinema-or-nothing movie-watchers will be put off by a high upfront fee.

“The argument that pricing secondary goods higher than primary goods can benefit consumers has been circulating for decades, but until now, no one has looked at hard data to see whether it’s true or not,” Wesley Hartmann, associate professor of marketing at Stanford GSB and co-author of the paper, said.

Essentially, your gut instinct is right; food profits bulk up what can be quite meagre ticket profits, especially during low-traffic weeks.

Any other insights?

Yep ― unsurprisingly, people who went to the theatre in groups tended to buy more concessions, as did those who bought their tickets online.

“The fact that the people who show up only for good or popular movies consume a lot less popcorn means that the total they pay is substantially less than that of people who will come to see anything,” Wesley Hartmann said.

“If you want to bring more consumers into the market, you need to keep ticket prices lower to attract them.”

Given that “The average price for a standard UK cinema ticket in 2023 was £7.92” compared to £6.53 in 2013 (per UK Cinema Association and Statista), that seems to have held true.

Popcorn prices, however? Those are now creeping up to the price of the ticket, though to be fair, they’ve always been proportionally pretty pricey.





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WHO and Africa CDC launch a response plan to the mpox outbreak

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White House Correspondent

The Africa Center for Disease Control and Prevention and the World Health Organization launched on Friday a continent-wide response plan to the outbreak of mpox, three weeks after WHO declared outbreaks in 12 African countries a global emergency.

The estimated budget for the six-month plan is almost $600 million, with 55% allocated to mpox response in 14 affected nations and boosting readiness in 15 others, while 45% is directed towards operational and technical support through partners, Africa CDC director-general Dr. Jean Kaseya told reporters on Friday.

The plan focuses on surveillance, laboratory testing and community engagement, Kaseya said, underscoring the fact that vaccines aren’t enough to fight the spreading outbreak.

The organization said that since the start of 2024, there have been 5,549 confirmed mpox cases across the continent, with 643 associated deaths, representing a sharp escalation in both infections and fatalities compared to previous years. The cases in Congo constituted 91% of the total number. Most mpox infections in Congo and Burundi, the second most affected country, are in children under age 15.

The plan comes a day after the first batch of mpox vaccines arrived in the capital of Congo, the center of the outbreak. The 100,000 doses of the JYNNEOS vaccine, manufactured by the Danish company Bavarian Nordic, have been donated by the European Union through HERA, the bloc’s agency for health emergencies. Another 100,000 are expected to be delivered on Saturday, Congolese authorities said.

“These vaccines are vital in safeguarding our health workers and vulnerable populations, and in curbing the spread of mpox,” Kaseya said Thursday.

The 200,000 doses are just a fraction of the 3 million that doses authorities have said are needed to end the mpox outbreaks in Congo, the epicenter of the global health emergency. The European Union countries pledged to donate more than 500,000 others, but the timeline for their delivery remained unclear.

Emmanuel Lampaert, Doctors Without Borders representative in Congo, said that vaccination was an additional tool, and that basic health measures were still crucial to combat the outbreak, and there were obviously challenges with that in many parts of Congo.

Congo issued an emergency approval of the vaccine, which has already been used in Europe and the United States in adults, but it remained unclear on Friday when the vaccination campaign would begin. For the moment, the rollout would be reserved for adults, Kaseya said, with priority targeted groups being those who have been in close contact with infected people and sex workers.

The European Medicines Agency is examining additional data to be able to administer it to children ranging in age from 12 to 17, which could happen at the end of the month, HERA Director-General Laurent Muschel said.

“We don’t have all the answers,” Muschel told reporters on Friday. “We learn by doing. We are going to adapt the strategy depending on the impact of the vaccination campaign.”



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Tories Flog Manifesto That Secured Worst Defeat in History

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Tories Flog Manifesto That Secured Worst Defeat in History





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The Tories have been updating their merchandise selection recently. Now that the iconic Keir Starmer Flip Flops have been discontinued

There’s some brass neck on display as the Party quietly adds the 2024 manifesto, dubbed “The Onward Manifesto,” to its shop. For £10.99 the policies that dispatched 11 cabinet ministers (the most in history) and secured the worst Tory defeat in their parliamentary history could be yours. Please allow up to five days for delivery… or maybe fourteen years…



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Mixtape: Folk Show – Episode 149

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Our latest Folk Show features a number of new releases that have been featured recently on KLOF Mag, kicking off with The Rheingans Sisters‘ new single Drink Up, for which we also premiered the video earlier today (watch it here).

Other artists we’ve recently featured include David Grubb, Andrew Wasylyk and Tommy Perman, Jacken Elswyth, Henry Parker & David Ian Roberts, Gillian Welch & David Rawlings and Jack Bunch. There’s also new music from AJ Woods, John Patrick Elliott, and Myles O’Reilly.

Most of the tracks in the playlist below include links to the albums on Bandcamp.

Listen on Mixcloud

Music Played

  1. The Rheingans Sisters – Drink Up (Start Close In)
  2. D’Gary – Gofo Libre (Mbo Loza)
  3. AJ Woods – Hawk Is Listenin’ (Hawk is Listenin’)
  4. Nathan Bowles Trio – Blank Range (Live at Three Lobed​/​WXDU Hopscotch Afternoon Jamboree 2017)
  5. John Patrick Elliott – Ceremony (My Role in the Show)
  6. David Grubb – Dream Speak (Circadia)
  7. Andrew Wasylyk and Tommy Perman – The Unbearable Sound Of The Roses (Ash Grey and The Gull Glides On)
  8. Myles O’Reilly – Guiso Walks The Kerry Way (Music from the Threshold)
  9. Jake Blount & Mali Obomsawin – Old Indian Hymn (Symbiont)
  10. Jacken Elswyth – Lost Gander (At Fargrounds)
  11. Nancy Elizabeth – Mexico (Dancing – 2013)
  12. Henry Parker & David Ian Roberts – Chasing Light (Chasing Light)
  13. Niamh Bury – Bite The Bridle (Yellow Roses)
  14. Gillian Welch & David Rawlings – Hashtag (woodland)
  15. Vivian Leva & Riley Calcagno – On Account of You (Vivian Leva & Riley Calcagno)
  16. Jack Bunch – Billy in the Lowground (Not A Flower on Dogwood Flats: The Music of Jack Bunch & Laurel County)



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Monster of Avignon’s daughter-in-law ‘caught him masturbating’ and says he asked granddaughters to pose naked for him: New horrors in trial of husband who drugged his wife, after daughter dubbed him ‘one of world’s worst sex predators’

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A daughter-in-law of the depraved husband who drugged his wife and let men rape her has claimed she caught him masturbating and that he asked his granddaughter to pose naked for him.

Aurore Lemaire, 37, recalled in court a harrowing moment in 2020 her young daughters were in the supermarket with Dominique, 71, and Gisele Pelicot, 72, when they asked their grandfather if he would buy them a toy. 

‘He replied; ‘I’d be very happy to get it for you if you pose naked for me.,” she said.

‘Police also found pictures of me, naked in the shower. ‘It was a real shock.’

Earlier, Pelicot’s daughter Caroline Payronnet declared him one of the worst sexual predators of the last two decades as she revealed the abuse he inflicted upon her.

Daughter-in-law Aurore Lemaire, 37, today spoke out in court claiming her father-in-law Dominique Pelicot, 71, asked her daughters to pose naked for him in 2020

Pelicot's second daughter-in-law Celine Fontelle told the court: ‘There are photos of me naked in the bathroom. My father-in-law created a montage of photos of me’

Pelicot’s second daughter-in-law Celine Fontelle told the court: ‘There are photos of me naked in the bathroom. My father-in-law created a montage of photos of me’

Caroline Peyronnet, 45, told the Avignon court today how she believed her father had drugged her too, after police showed her photos of her lying unconscious on a bed in her mother’s underwear

Caroline Peyronnet, 45, told the Avignon court today how she believed her father had drugged her too, after police showed her photos of her lying unconscious on a bed in her mother’s underwear

Gisele Pelicot, 72, told the court in Avignon how she wanted to 'disappear' when police revealed the dark truth to her after arresting her husband in late 2020. Pictured: Gisele Pelicot (R), accompanied by her son David (C) and Florian (L) as they leave the criminal court in Avignon, France, September 5

Gisele Pelicot, 72, told the court in Avignon how she wanted to ‘disappear’ when police revealed the dark truth to her after arresting her husband in late 2020. Pictured: Gisele Pelicot (R), accompanied by her son David (C) and Florian (L) as they leave the criminal court in Avignon, France, September 5

Dominique Pelicot is accused of recruiting men online to assault his wife repeatedly over a decade until his arrest in 2020

Dominique Pelicot is accused of recruiting men online to assault his wife repeatedly over a decade until his arrest in 2020

Gisele Pelicot's daughter Caroline Peyronnet enters the court room to give evidence against her dad Dominque Pelicot. Pictured: Artist drawing from inside the court of Caroline in the dock

Gisele Pelicot’s daughter Caroline Peyronnet enters the court room to give evidence against her dad Dominque Pelicot. Pictured: Artist drawing from inside the court of Caroline in the dock

The twisted pervert bowed his head and cried in the dock in Avignon as his 45-year-old child told how she believed he had drugged her too, after police showed her photos of her lying unconscious on a bed in her mother’s underwear.

In between pauses to catch her breath, Peyronnet told the court: ‘I stand here as the child and daughter of the main accused and as a victim of an unbearable atrocity.

‘At 8.25pm on 2nd November 2020, my family changed. Before that we were a united family. I loved my father.

‘I knew him as a caring, considerate man who was affectionate father without any hint of an inappropriate look or unwelcomed touch. What hit as a like a cataclysm.

‘Then my mother called me to say that there was a problem with my father. I imagine that he is intensive care, that he is dying.

‘But she tells me that my father has been drugging her for years so that strangers can rape her in her won bed.

‘She says she has seen photos of what happened to her and that the police want to show her video’s of what happened.

‘I totally lost my foundations. Fortunately my husband [Pierre] was there and my six year old son too. We took him away so that he did not hear his mother’s screams.

‘My mother was alone in the house where she had been defiled by so many strangers.

‘We know she is in danger that night and I did not close my eyes that night, neither could my brothers.

‘In the morning I took my son to school but I cannot tell him that he will never see the grandfather that he loves so much again.

‘When we get to my mother, we find her destroyed.

‘The police investigator tells us he doesn’t know how many men are involved – 30 or 50. My older brother David is stoic. My little brother Florian collapses.

‘Going back to that house after what we had heard was torture. The place where my son had loved to spend holidays with his grandpa. Impossible.

‘Then the police call me and tell me he has something to show me.

‘He tells me to sit down and he says he has two photos to show me.

Caroline continued: ‘The first photo is of a woman who is apparently sleeping lying on her side with the light on. We can see her backside.

‘The second photo, the same position, same panties, same staging.

‘I still don’t recognise myself and then the policeman says tome; “but it’s definitely you with that brown spot on your cheek”.

‘I discover that my father photographed me without my knowledge. I understood immediately that it was me in those photos. I do not sleep like that. So I strongly believe that he drugged me.’

Turning her head to ceiling in despair Mrs Peyronnet told the court: ‘I am not trying to undermine my father [but] justice must be done.

‘What do you do when your father is one of the worst sexual predators of the last 20 years but there is no evidence that he drugged me?

Judge Roger Arata replied: ‘Madame I cannot answer that question, but this trial must come to conclusion, and everyone must have answers.’

The sons of Gisele Pelicot, Florian, right, David, left, and her daughter Caroline, centre, arrive in the Avignon court house, southern France, Thursday, Sept. 5, 2024

The sons of Gisele Pelicot, Florian, right, David, left, and her daughter Caroline, centre, arrive in the Avignon court house, southern France, Thursday, Sept. 5, 2024

The son of Gisele Pelicot, Florian (L) and her daughter Caroline Darian (R) leave the criminal court in Avignon, France, 05 September 2024

The son of Gisele Pelicot, Florian (L) and her daughter Caroline Darian (R) leave the criminal court in Avignon, France, 05 September 2024

The rapist’s two daughter-in-laws Celine Fontelle and Aurore Lemaire also claim that Pelicot took photos of them without their knowledge. 

Celine Fontelle told the court: ‘There are photos of me naked in the bathroom.

‘My father-in-law created a montage of photos of me.’

Caroline’s book entitled ‘And I Stopped Calling You Papa’ – published in 2022 under the pen name Caroline Darian – provides skin-crawling details of her father’s depravity and has already been quoted by the judge during the trial. 

Mr Pelicot’s daughter explains across 176 pages the ways in which her father cruelly manipulated, abused and destroyed the physical and mental health of his wife Gisele before his dark deeds were eventually discovered in November 2020. 

She writes how her father ‘dressed Maman like a low-rent prostitute’ and forbade many of the men he invited to the family home from wearing a condom as they abused her unconscious mother – including one who even tested positive for HIV.

And she explained how she was confronted with the reality that she too had been drugged by her own dad, dressed in underwear and left in the foetal position as he snapped away with a camera. 

Caroline fled the courtroom in tears on Tuesday after those images were discussed amid the trial.

Though some of the names were changed when the book was published, Caroline gives a horrendous account of how her father drugged her mother with powerful tranquillisers. 

Darian's book, released in 2022 roughly a year and a half after her father's crimes were revealed, charts the destruction of the Pelicot family when Gisele's health was inexplicably falling apart

Darian’s book, released in 2022 roughly a year and a half after her father’s crimes were revealed, charts the destruction of the Pelicot family when Gisele’s health was inexplicably falling apart

Writing about one incident in the summer of 2018, Caroline recalls how her brother went to visit their parents for an evening meal, only to see his mother practically falling asleep at the dinner table.

‘Only a few minutes after sitting down Maman was swaying in her chair as though she was drunk,’ Caroline quotes him as saying.

‘Suddenly her whole body was drained of energy, like a rag doll.’

‘It happens. It’s better if I take her to bed,’ his father was reported as saying, feigning the role of a concerned husband acting in his wife’s best interests.

‘In reality the cocktail of drugs, poured into her glass of rosé, was beginning to take effect,’ Caroline said. 

It comes after the wife of the twisted pervert, Gisele Pelicot, 72, told a judge she was on the brink of taking her own life after learning she had been defiled by dozens of strangers when her husband drugged her and left her unconscious.

She told the court how she wanted to ‘disappear’ when police revealed the dark truth to her after arresting her husband in late 2020.

The depraved man was initially arrested for taking pictures up the skirts of female shoppers in a supermarket.

But when police confiscated his computer they uncovered more than 20,000 images and videos of strangers abusing his snoring wife in a campaign of twisted abuse that lasted almost a decade.

‘I only wanted one thing and that was to disappear. I told myself: ”I am going to get in my car with my dog and end it all”,’ Madame Pelicot told the court yesterday, going on to recount how her adult children were terrified she was going to kill herself before they could reach her.

Gisele Pelicot is pictured above as she left the court in Avignon, France, on September 5

Gisele Pelicot is pictured above as she left the court in Avignon, France, on September 5

Madame Pelicot is determined that the public knows that she played no part in her husband's warped sexual fantasies that he played out at their picturesque chalet home in the Provence village of Mazan (pictured)

Madame Pelicot is determined that the public knows that she played no part in her husband’s warped sexual fantasies that he played out at their picturesque chalet home in the Provence village of Mazan (pictured)

Mr Pelicot's daughter Caroline has already provided in skin-crawling detail an extensive account of her father's heinousness

Mr Pelicot’s daughter Caroline has already provided in skin-crawling detail an extensive account of her father’s heinousness

‘When I told my sons about this, I don’t think they really understood, they were withdrawn… I think they were in a state of shock. They said: ”Don’t say such silly things”.

‘[That] evening, the children rang all the time saying ”don’t disappear”… they were worried I might die.’

Mr Pelicot broke down in tears in the dock yesterday as he listened to his wife, wearing an orange dress, a white blouse and a gold necklace, detail how they fell in love and started their married life together before her world ‘collapsed’ when the extent of his depravity was discovered.

She went on to admit that she had a short affair 14 years after marrying Mr Pelicot in 1973 but insisted they patched things up and shared a strong union, until police informed her of her husband’s deeds in 2020.

‘We had everything, we had a great life. I don’t understand how this could have happened,’ the 72-year-old told Judge Roger Arata. 

‘We were not rich but we were happy.

Despite Madame Pelicot’s belief she was in a loving relationship, from 2011 until 2020 her husband orchestrated a campaign of abuse, drugging her and inviting dozens of men to rape her for his camera.  

Judge Arata later asked Madame Pelicot if she suffered any problems after the decade of abuse, to which she replied that she was tested for HIV, adding: ‘I was diagnosed with four sexually transmitted diseases at the Versailles medical forensic unit.’

She did not contract HIV, despite being raped several times by a man who tested positive for the virus without a condom.  

The judge also asked Madame Pelicot whether her husband had any ‘sexual desires’ that she didn’t want to participate in.

‘Once we went to a nightclub with another couple where there was a ‘swingers’ room’. But I didn’t want to get involved in that so we did not go into that room and we just stayed in the main nightclub,’ the mother-of-three replied.

Another judge asked Madame Pelicot whether she and her husband ever discussed filming their sexual intercourse. 

A court drawing shows Madame Pelicot taking the stand, facing her husband and the 50 others accused of raping her

A court drawing shows Madame Pelicot taking the stand, facing her husband and the 50 others accused of raping her

Gisele Pelicot, 72, arrives at court in Avignon, France, on the morning of September 4

Gisele Pelicot, 72, arrives at court in Avignon, France, on the morning of September 4

She said: ‘I never agreed to Monsieur Pelicot filming us having sex. No the only time we talked about something like this was at the swingers’ room at the nightclub. I understood that he would have wanted to do it. But for me it was impossible.’

The judge told Madame Pelicot that Mr Pelicot has acknowledged his crimes, and asked her; ‘What do you feel about this?’

She replied: ‘Feelings of disgust. We had everything, we had a great life. I don’t understand how this could have happened.’

Madame Pelicot, who has three children and seven grandchildren, bravely waived her right to anonymity to make public details of the horrific betrayal her partner of 50 years had forced her to endure over ten years. 

Mr Pelicot and 14 of his co-accused have admitted their part in France’s worst rape case. 

But another 35 men – from all walks of life – deny that they forced themselves on Madame Pelicot while she was unconscious, claiming that she in some way consented.

Madame Pelicot’s lawyer asked her in court: ‘Some of the defendants admit the facts, others contest all the facts, and others confirm they were present but deny it was rape.

‘You caught four sexually transmitted diseases and were exposed to HIV six times. What have you got to say to people who claim you consented to all this?’

The brave mother-of-three replied: ‘All I have to say is, it’s an insult to my intelligence. These individuals were totally aware of what state I was in. I never knowingly took part in any of these things.

‘How can you even try and make people think that a woman would knowingly take part in all this?’

The shocking case is set to continue until December 20. 



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Staines: Police treating deaths of children as murder

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The deaths of three children found at a house in Surrey with their father are being treated as murder, police have said.

Dominik Swiderski, aged three, and his brothers Nikodem and Kacper, both aged two, were found dead in Staines on Saturday.

Their father had been identified by police as Polish national Piotr Swiderski, aged 31.

Surrey Police said inquests into all four deaths would take place in due course.

“We are not looking for anyone else in connection with our investigation. Their mother is being supported by specially trained officers,” the force said.

Police previously said it had referred itself to the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC), due to previous contact with the family.



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