Connect with us

Published

on

Bob Geldof has backed climate change protesters who threw tomato soup over Van Gogh’s Sunflowers painting – saying they were “1,000% right” in their actions.

The 71-year-old musician, said it had been “clever” to deface the famous 1888 painting while it was covered with a glass screen, because people would only view the act as annoying – and “annoying is quite good”.

The masterpiece – which has an estimated value of £72.5m – was hanging in the National Gallery when it was targeted by two women from the Just Stop Oil group earlier this month.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Soup thrown over Van Gogh painting

The women, who also stuck their hands to the wall with super glue, were charged with criminal damage and aggravated trespass.

The National Gallery has said there is “minor damage” to the frame of the painting, but the work is “unharmed” and is now back on display.

Geldof, a long-standing climate and humanitarian campaigner, told Radio Times: “The climate activists are 1,000% right! And 1,000% I support them.

“It’s offensive to destroy Van Gogh’s genius. That achieves nothing. But it was clever to throw it on the glass knowing it wouldn’t be destroyed.

More on Bob Geldof

“That’s just annoying. And annoying is quite good.

“I was driving to Hyde Park when the Extinction Rebellion people blocked it and I was f****** furious.

“But I wasn’t railing against them. I was thinking, ‘If I was 18, would I be there?’ and the answer is yes.

“Annoying people into policy change may not work. Does that mean I’m against their passion? Their anger? Their bravery? No.

“Would I put up with it? They’re not killing anyone. Climate change will.”

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Just Stop Oil spray Harrods and block roads

The throwing of the tomato soup is the latest in a series of actions by the climate activists, who are demanding the government halts all new oil and gas licences and consents.

On Monday, the Madame Tussauds waxwork model of King Charles III was smeared with chocolate cake, in what Just Stop Oil said was their 24th day of civil unrest.

On Sunday, the group praised activists in Germany who threw mashed potato over Claude Monet’s Les Meules painting, which sold for $110m in 2019.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Mashed potato thrown on Monet painting

Previous protests have included activists gluing themselves on to the famous Abbey Road crossing in London, scaling the Queen Elizabeth II Bridge 200ft (60m) above the Dartford Crossing, and spraying the Aston Martin showroom in London’s Park Lane with orange paint.

During the Radio Times interview, Geldof also addressed the issue of some Western activists being labelled as “white saviours” for their humanitarian work.

Click to subscribe to Backstage wherever you get your podcasts

Asked whether he feels charities try too hard to steer clear of such criticism, he replied: “I don’t think most people give a f*** about that.

“It’s just a wormhole that people have disappeared down, where everything can be deconstructed. But it’s trite and silly, in my view.

“If someone is hurt and I personally see it, and I’m aware of it, I’ll do what I can to make them less hurt… black saviours, white saviours, green saviours, brown saviours, I’m with them all.”

The full interview is in the current edition of Radio Times.

 A new daily programme looking at the stories that are impacting our changing climate and the search for solutions.

Watch the Daily Climate Show at 3.30pm Monday to Friday, and The Climate Show with Tom Heap on Saturday and Sunday at 3.30pm and 7.30pm.

All on Sky News, on the Sky News website and app, on YouTube and Twitter.

The show investigates how global warming is changing our landscape and highlights solutions to the crisis.

Continue Reading

UK

PhD student guilty of drugging and raping 10 women in London and China

Published

on

By

PhD student guilty of drugging and raping 10 women in London and China - as police fear more than 50 other victims

A man has been convicted of drugging and raping 10 women in London and China between 2019 and 2023.

Chinese PhD student Zhenhao Zou, 28, filmed nine of the attacks as “souvenirs”, and kept a trophy box of women’s belongings, jurors in his trial were told.

Warning: This article contains details of sexual offences

He was accused in court of drugging and raping three women in London and seven in China between 2019 and 2023.

Jurors at Inner London Crown Court found him guilty of 11 charges of rape against 10 women, including two who have been identified and another eight who have yet to be traced.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Moment police arrest student guilty of rape

The mechanical engineering student was also convicted of three counts of voyeurism, 10 of possession of an extreme pornographic image, one of false imprisonment and three of possession of a controlled drug with intent to commit a sexual offence, namely butanediol.

He was cleared of two further counts of possession of an extreme pornographic image and one of possession of MDMA with intent to commit a sexual offence.

***ONLY USE IF HE IS CONVICTED OF AT LEAST TWO RAPES*** The trial heard Zou kept a 'lost property box' full of women's belongings. Pic: Met Police
Image:
The trial heard Zou kept a ‘lost property box’ full of women’s belongings. Pic: Met Police

The jury has not reached verdicts on four counts of possession of drugs with intent to commit a sexual offence.

Zou – who first moved to Belfast in 2017 to study mechanical engineering at Queen’s University before moving to London in 2019 – showed no visible reaction as the verdicts were read out in court.

Catherine Farrelly KC, prosecuting, told jurors during the trial that Zou “presents as a smart and charming young man” but is “also a persistent sexual predator; a voyeur and a rapist”.

***ONLY USE IF HE IS CONVICTED OF AT LEAST TWO RAPES*** A discreet camera belonging to Zou. Pic: Met Police
Image:
A discreet camera belonging to Zou. Pic: Met Police

Zou, who also used the name Pakho online, befriended fellow Chinese students on WeChat and dating apps, before inviting them for drinks and drugging them at his flats in London or an unknown location in China, the court heard.

The jury heard how he would secretly film his attacks using a mobile device and hidden cameras, and was shown evidence found on SD cards at his accommodation of him raping unconscious women in London and in China.

Senior Crown Prosecution Service prosecutor Saira Pike thanked the “incredibly strong and brave” women who came forward to report his “heinous” crimes.

“Zou is a serial rapist and a danger to women,” she said.

“In some instances, we have not been able to identify Zou’s victims. Without knowing who these women are, we have not been able to support them through a deeply distressing period of time.

“We have always been determined to seek justice for both the unidentified and identified victims in this case.”

Continue Reading

UK

James Scott Rhys Anderson: British man who ‘fought for Ukraine’ jailed for 19 years in Russia

Published

on

By

James Scott Rhys Anderson: British man who 'fought for Ukraine' jailed for 19 years in Russia

A British man has been jailed for 19 years after a Russian court found him guilty of fighting for Ukraine in the country’s Kursk region.

James Scott Rhys Anderson, 22, had been charged with terrorist and mercenary offences and was found guilty after a closed trial.

The court said he was to serve the first five years of his sentence in prison and the remainder in a penal colony.

In the trial, a Ukrainian soldier from the same unit was questioned as a witness.

Ukrainian troops broke across the border into Kursk region on 6 August last year.

They still hold some territory there seven months later, despite attempts by Russian forces to force them out.

Investigators accused Anderson of illegally crossing into Kursk in November as part of an armed group that committed unspecified “criminal acts against civilians”.

Russian state media published video showing him being led in handcuffs and locked in a cage of the kind where defendants in Russian court cases are placed.

Read more:
Ukraine war latest: ‘US stops sharing intelligence’
‘Long-range drone strikes weakening Russia’s combat ability’

It apparently showed Anderson saying he had served in the British army from 2019-2023 before deciding to join the foreign legion of Ukraine’s armed forces.

Early on in the war, Ukraine’s authorities said more than 20,000 people from 52 countries came to Ukraine’s aid.

Since then, the number of foreign fighters in Ukraine’s military has been classified.

Continue Reading

UK

Woman pleads guilty over deaths of four paddleboarders in Pembrokeshire

Published

on

By

Woman pleads guilty over deaths of four paddleboarders in Pembrokeshire

A woman has pleaded guilty to gross negligence manslaughter over the deaths of four paddleboarders on a river in Pembrokeshire.

Paddleboarding instructor Nerys Lloyd, 39, conducted a stand up paddle tour during extremely hazardous conditions on the River Cleddau in the West Wales town of Haverfordwest in October 2021.

Andrea Powell, 41, Morgan Rogers, 24 and Nicola Wheatley, 40 – and Lloyd’s fellow instructor Paul O’Dwyer, 42 – died after getting into difficulty.

At the time of the tragedy there had been heavy flooding and severe weather warnings were in place.

Lloyd, 39, who was the owner and sole director of Salty Dog Co Ltd, spoke to confirm her name before pleading guilty on Wednesday to all five counts, including an offence under the Health and Safety at Work Act.

Police were called to the weir in Haverfordwest after reports of paddleboarders in distress.

As the group approached the weir, the three participants were pulled over the top and became trapped.

More on Pembrokeshire

Mr O’Dwyer initially exited the water, but re-entered the river in an attempt to rescue the others.

Nerys Lloyd (centre, on crutches) leaving Swansea Crown Court, where she guilty to five charges in connection with the deaths of Morgan Rogers, Nicola Wheatley, Paul O'Dwyer and Andrea Powell.
Pic: PA
Image:
Nerys Lloyd (centre, on crutches) leaving Swansea Crown Court. Pic: PA

Death has ‘left a void’

Emergency services attended and Mr O’Dwyer, from Port Talbot, Ms Rogers, from Merthyr Tydfil, and Ms Wheatley, from Swansea, were declared dead at the scene.

Ms Powell, from Bridgend, was taken to hospital but died six days later.

The four victims died of drowning/immersion, according to the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS).

After the incident, Ms Wheatley’s family paid tribute to her and said her death had “left a void in [their] lives that will never be filled”.

Ms Rogers’s family said she was the “best that she could be” and would be “sadly missed”.

The family of Mr O’Dwyer described him as “a devoted husband, father, son and brother”, whose “passion for the water” began at an early age.

Ms Powell was someone who “loved life”, her family said, as they thanked those who had shown them support.

Three people have died and one is in a critical condition after a group of paddleboarders got into difficulties on the River Cleddau in Wales. Pic: OpenStreetMap
Image:
Pic: OpenStreetMap

‘Avoidable tragedy’

Lisa Rose, specialist prosecutor with the CPS’s special crime division, said it was an “avoidable tragedy”.

“Despite going to check the state of the river before departing on the tour, Nerys Lloyd failed to inspect the weir,” she said.

Ms Rose said there was “no safety briefing or formal risk assessments” and that Lloyd “was not qualified to take paddleboarders out in such hazardous conditions”.

“Final decisions to continue with the event were Lloyd’s decision, and as a result she held complete and entire responsibility,” Ms Rose added.

Sentencing to take place in April

“I hope these convictions provide some sense of justice for those affected and our thoughts remain with the families and friends of the victims at this time.”

Read more from Sky News:
PhD student convicted of raping 10 women
Liam Payne’s girlfriend ‘still working on accepting’ his death
Why is Noel Clarke suing The Guardian?

Lloyd, of Aberavon, was charged with the offences on 4 October last year.

She was granted unconditional bail by Judge Mrs Justice Stacey until her sentencing hearing on 15 April.

Continue Reading

Trending