Subject: Re: Sudanese in Canberra Wed 14 Oct 2020, 2:35 pm
Neferti wrote:
Neferti wrote:
Three Canberra men found guilty of gang rape after night out at Mooseheads nightclub
Three men have been found guilty of taking part in a gang rape after a night out drinking in Canberra last year. Simon Vunilagi, who was accused of controlling the situation, was found guilty of eight of eleven charges, including rape, rape in company and one act of indecency. Josefa Masivesi, 45, who lived in the unit where the offences happened was found guilty of three charges and Simi Vatanitawake, 22, was convicted of one count of rape in company. A fourth man, Ratu Macanawai, 25, was cleared of the two charges against him. The ACT Supreme Court trial was heard by Chief Justice Helen Murrell last month. The victim told the court she feared for her life when she was raped by the men over several hours until she finally escaped and sought help from a stranger.
With those names, they sound more like Fijians or Maori to me.
Hang the Pacific Islander bastards and hang em high.
Neferti Admin
Posts : 2534 Join date : 2018-07-15
Subject: Re: Sudanese in Canberra Mon 12 Oct 2020, 7:42 am
Neferti wrote:
Three Canberra men found guilty of gang rape after night out at Mooseheads nightclub
Three men have been found guilty of taking part in a gang rape after a night out drinking in Canberra last year. Simon Vunilagi, who was accused of controlling the situation, was found guilty of eight of eleven charges, including rape, rape in company and one act of indecency. Josefa Masivesi, 45, who lived in the unit where the offences happened was found guilty of three charges and Simi Vatanitawake, 22, was convicted of one count of rape in company. A fourth man, Ratu Macanawai, 25, was cleared of the two charges against him. The ACT Supreme Court trial was heard by Chief Justice Helen Murrell last month. The victim told the court she feared for her life when she was raped by the men over several hours until she finally escaped and sought help from a stranger.
With those names, they sound more like Fijians or Maori to me.
Neferti Admin
Posts : 2534 Join date : 2018-07-15
Subject: Re: Sudanese in Canberra Mon 12 Oct 2020, 7:40 am
Three Canberra men found guilty of gang rape after night out at Mooseheads nightclub
Three men have been found guilty of taking part in a gang rape after a night out drinking in Canberra last year. Simon Vunilagi, who was accused of controlling the situation, was found guilty of eight of eleven charges, including rape, rape in company and one act of indecency. Josefa Masivesi, 45, who lived in the unit where the offences happened was found guilty of three charges and Simi Vatanitawake, 22, was convicted of one count of rape in company. A fourth man, Ratu Macanawai, 25, was cleared of the two charges against him. The ACT Supreme Court trial was heard by Chief Justice Helen Murrell last month. The victim told the court she feared for her life when she was raped by the men over several hours until she finally escaped and sought help from a stranger.
Subject: Re: Sudanese in Canberra Fri 09 Oct 2020, 7:50 am
Patriot wrote:
And the Greenies and Labor would have flooded Australia with these vermin when they RESTARTED to BOATS.
Patriot
Posts : 544 Join date : 2018-08-14
Subject: Re: Sudanese in Canberra Thu 08 Oct 2020, 1:23 pm
And the Greenies and Labor would have flooded Australia with these vermin when they RESTARTED to BOATS.
Bobby2
Posts : 1768 Join date : 2018-12-19
Subject: Re: Sudanese in Canberra Thu 08 Oct 2020, 10:44 am
Bad eggs - the lot of them.
Neferti Admin
Posts : 2534 Join date : 2018-07-15
Subject: Sudanese in Canberra Thu 08 Oct 2020, 7:44 am
Sudanese refugee Clinton Saki faces deportation after torturing Canberra man over missing $450
The leader of a group who tortured a Canberra man by stripping him, tying him up, beating him, burning him, and threatening to cut off his genitals has been jailed. Clinton Saki, 27, faces deportation back to Sudan after his conviction in the ACT Supreme Court on Wednesday. Saki pleaded guilty to kidnapping and assault occasioning grievous bodily harm over the attack in Canberra's north last year that left the victim with permanent scarring. The court previously heard the victim had gone to the home of Mary Ayuel for a lift to an appointment on October 2. While there, the victim spoke to Saki, Ayuel's roommate, in a bedroom of the Moncrieff home, but soon afterwards Saki ran out of the room saying: "F***, f***, what happened? Someone has stolen my money." The court heard Saki — who had intended to send the $450 to his family in Africa — accused the victim of the theft and got a knife to stab him.
Victim held captive and beaten after missing money not found
Saki's co-offenders Ayuel, 22, and Chol Bol Nyuon, 30, stopped him, and the trio instead stripped the man naked in search of the money. When they could not find it, Saki accused the man of hiding it. The offenders bound the victim to a chair with electric cables. Over the next eight-and-a-half hours, they kicked and punched him, choked and whipped him with a cord, singed his hair with a lighter, and burnt him with an iron. Saki threatened to cut off his leg and penis, and said they would "kill him in slow motion". The victim was released after his family agreed to pay the money. A sentence hearing heard the man had been traumatised by the attack and would suffer permanent scarring and pain from his wounds. In a statement, the victim said he had suffered from depression, anxiety and suicidal thoughts after the attack.
Refugee faces deportation to Sudan after conviction
The court heard Saki had been born in Sudan but moved to a refugee camp when he was six years old. He moved to Australia in 2006 and has lived in Canberra since 2011. He was assessed as having a medium-to-low risk of re-offending. Justice David Mossop said the offending did not fit a pattern of behaviour, and was instead a "dreadful one-off event". The court also heard Saki could be deported if he was sentenced to more than one year in jail. But the judge said he could not ascertain the chances of deportation, and he could not structure a sentence based on that risk. Saki was sentenced to three-and-a-half years jail, with a non-parole period of two years. The sentence was backdated to take into account time spent in custody. Saki will be eligible for parole in October next year. In June, Nyuon was handed three-and-a-half months' jail for assault. Ayuel was sentenced in August to more than two years' jail for unlawful confinement and choking.