Wednesday 21 September - headlines
21-09-2011
'This man has come out of prison and is running the same bar I was raped in': Victim's fury as Greek bar owner returns to work – The Daily Mail
Greek bar owner has returned to work after serving five-and-a-half years for aiding and abetting rape - and now his British victim wants to warn tourists travelling to the island.
Man admits to elaborate online stalking campaign against girlfriend – The Guardian
Student says three years of harassment 'wrecked her life' and calls for persecutor to be sent to prison
The new Met chief's U-turn is welcome – he had made a gross misjudgement– The Guardian
Demanding Guardian reporters' notebooks was a disgrace. Now the police must pursue the truth about phone hacking
After the riots: the Hackney worker teaching young men to be ambitious – The Guardian
Youth worker Emeka Egbuonu's book has much to teach policymakers following the riots, writes Rachel Williams
Clarke's prison plans: the prospects are looking as grim as ever (Politics Blog) – The Guardian
Riots may have put paid to justice secretary's proposal to restrict use of remand in custody
Man who led a double life murdered fiancée and hid her in suitcase– The Independent
A womanising music teacher who led a double life while dating a string of different women was found guilty yesterday of murdering his fiancée as their young children played upstairs.
Met drops legal fight to reveal Dowler sources– The Independent
The Metropolitan Police has postponed legal action against The Guardian after facing widespread criticism for what was deemed an attack on press freedom.
Jo Yeates murder suspect in court– The Sun
Her parents sit feet from Vincent Tabak
Nick Clegg: young rioters had no future– The Telegraph
The rioters who looted and caused mayhem throughout England last month were young people with “nothing to lose” and whose future held “little value”, Nick Clegg will say today.
Phone Hacking: Met admits it was wrong to use Official Secrets Act against Guardian– The Telegraph
The Metropolitan Police has admitted it was wrong when it tried to use the Official Secrets Act to force a national newspaper reporter to reveal their journalistic sources.
