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A husband described as one of France’s worst sex offenders is expected to be sentenced tomorrow – as the verdicts for all 51 defendants come back in the Gisele Pelicot mass rape trial.

Dominique Pelicot, 72, has admitted drugging and raping his then-wife Ms Pelicot, 72, for almost a decade.

During the four-month trial, he explained how he invited strangers to allegedly rape her as well.

“I am a rapist,” he said while giving evidence, claiming all the other defendants were also aware it was rape.

The court heard Dominique Pelicot began sedating his wife with anti-anxiety medication and raping her in 2011 when they lived in Paris.

However, his crimes escalated when they moved to the pretty Provencal village of Mazan.

It was here that he said he began recruiting men to rape his wife using a chat room called “without her knowing”.

He told the men he invited to their home not to park by the house to avoid detection.

They were also told not to wear fragrance or smoke to avoid leaving any trace that Ms Pelicot may smell.

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France mass rape verdicts expected

He then filmed the attacks.

In 2020, he was caught by chance when a security guard spotted him trying to film up women’s skirts in a local shopping centre.

A complaint was filed and when the police investigated, they found 20,000 indecent images including footage of men having sex with Ms Pelicot while she was sedated.

“He’s extremely dangerous because he’s intelligent and he’s calculated,” said Christophe Huguenin-Virchaux, a lawyer for one of the defendants.

“Mazan is possibly just a drop in the ocean of what Dominique Pelicot has done.”

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Who is Dominique Pelicot?

Gisele Pelicot with her lawyers on 18 November. Pic: Reuters
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Gisele Pelicot with her lawyers in November. Pic: Reuters

Fifty other men have also been on trial accused of rape or sexual assault.

The majority deny the charges saying they were not aware that Ms Pelicot had not consented.

Some claim Dominique Pelicot had told them that they were taking part in the couple’s sex game.

Among those facing one of the most severe sentences is 30-year-old Charly A.

He is accused of raping Ms Pelicot six times including on her birthday.

Mr Huguenin-Virchaux, his defence lawyer, has argued Charly thought Ms Pelicot knew what was happening.

“From the beginning, he was told this was a scenario for swingers. A couple with a fantasy. He was light years away from realising he was participating in rape,” the defence lawyer added.

Unconscious and powerless when she was attacked, Ms Pelicot consciously waived her right to anonymity so the evidence could be heard in public.

Her bravery has inspired millions of people across the country and beyond to join protests against sexual violence.

Read more:
Pelicot sons face ‘devil father’ in court
Thousands protest against sexual violence in France
Ms Pelicot says her husband ‘destroyed’ and betrayed her

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Protesters praise Gisele Pelicot

Judges are expected to hand down all the verdicts and sentences on Thursday.

Dominique Pelicot faces the rest of his life in jail.

Prosecutors have asked for sentences totalling more than 600 years in jail for all 51 defendants.

Ms Pelicot says she is a destroyed woman.

The 72-year-old has said she is seeing a psychologist and takes long walks as she tries to rebuild what others stole from her.

She does not know if she will ever recover.

And there’s no doubt, the horror of what happened to her will haunt France long after the verdicts are delivered.

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Vladimir Putin sends grave warning to Ukraine’s allies over Western troop deployment

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Vladimir Putin sends grave warning to Ukraine's allies over Western troop deployment

Russian President Vladimir Putin has said any foreign troops operating as part of a peacekeeping force in Ukraine would be considered a “legitimate target” by Moscow.

It comes a day after French President Emmanuel Macron said 26 of Ukraine’s allies had formally committed to deploying troops “by land, sea or air” to help guarantee Kyiv’s security the day after any ceasefire or peace is achieved.

Mr Macron stressed any troops would be deployed to prevent “any new major aggression” and not at the frontline, adding the force does “not have the will or the objective of waging war against Russia”.

Mr Putin quickly poured cold water on the proposals when speaking at an economic forum in Russia’s eastern Vladivostok region on Friday.

Directly responding to Mr Macron’s comments, he said: “If any troops appear there, especially now, during military operations, we proceed from the fact that these will be legitimate targets for their destruction.

“And if decisions are reached that lead to peace, to long-term peace, then I simply do not see any sense in their presence on the territory of Ukraine, full stop.”

Russia has long argued that one of its reasons for going to war in Ukraine was to prevent NATO from admitting Kyiv as a member and placing its forces in Ukraine.

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Speaking today, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said it was important that security guarantees “start working now, during the war, and not only after it ends”.

On Thursday, NATO chief Mark Rutte said Russia had no veto on Western troops being deployed to Ukraine: “Why are we interested in what Russia thinks about troops in Ukraine? It’s a sovereign country. It’s not for them to decide.”

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Our Moscow correspondent Ivor Bennett reveals the that three things Vladimir Putin’s warning to foreign peacekeeping troops in Ukraine reveals.

‘Please come to Moscow’

Mr Putin also addressed the chances of a direct meeting between himself and Mr Zelesnkyy aimed at ending the war.

Such a proposal looked positive after the Russian met Donald Trump in Alaska last month, but Mr Putin said on Friday he did not see much point in such a meeting because “it will be practically impossible to reach an agreement with the Ukrainian side on key issues”.

However, he reiterated an offer he made earlier this week to host Mr Zelenskyy for talks in Moscow, which Ukraine’s defence minister previously declared as “knowingly unacceptable”.

“I said: ‘I’m ready, please, come, we will definitely provide working conditions and security, a 100% guarantee’,” Mr Putin said.

Russian President Vladimir Putin visits an interactive exhibition in Vladivostok. Pic: Sputnik/Reuters
Image:
Russian President Vladimir Putin visits an interactive exhibition in Vladivostok. Pic: Sputnik/Reuters

“But if they tell us: ‘we want to meet with you, but you have to go somewhere else for this meeting’, it seems to me that these are simply excessive requests on us.”

Speaking at a news conference in Paris on Thursday, Mr Zelenskyy said US mediators informed him about Mr Putin’s invitation.

“Our American partners told us that Putin invited me to Moscow, and I believe that if you want to avoid a meeting, you should invite me to Moscow,” he said.

However, he said the fact that the issue of organising a meeting arose was “not bad”.

Drone strikes continue

While talks to end the war continue at a diplomatic level, more heavy drone strikes were recorded across Ukraine.

Kyiv’s air force said Moscow attacked Ukraine overnight with 157 strike and decoy drones, as well as seven missiles of various types.

Air defences shot down or jammed 121 of the drones, it said, but 35 drones and seven missiles still struck 10 locations.

Russian drone attack damages houses in Dnipro. Pic: Reuters
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Russian drone attack damages houses in Dnipro. Pic: Reuters

Russian drone attack damages houses in Dnipro. Pic: Reuters
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Russian drone attack damages houses in Dnipro. Pic: Reuters

Elsewhere, Russian troops destroyed 92 Ukrainian drones overnight, according to its defence ministry.

Local social media channels in the city of Ryazan, approximately 200 kilometres (125 miles) southeast of Moscow, reported that the city’s Rosneft oil refinery had been targeted. Ryazan’s regional governor said that drone debris had fallen on an “industrial enterprise” but did not give further details.

Ukraine has stepped up attacks on Russian oil infrastructure that it says fuels Moscow’s war effort in recent months.

Military analyst Professor Michael Clarke said Ukraine’s campaign on Russia’s oil refineries has been a successful one so far, but doubts it will hurt Moscow’s war machine too much.

“Will that directly affect the war? Probably not. Because the Russian military runs on diesel,” he said.

“It filters through to the war in the sense that it inconveniences and bothers the Russians and reminds the Russian population that this war has a cost to them as well.”

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Two hostages shown in Hamas video – as Israel strikes high-rise building in Gaza City

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Two hostages shown in Hamas video - as Israel strikes high-rise building in Gaza City

Hamas has released a video showing two Israeli hostages, one of whom says he is being held in Gaza City, where the IDF has launched a major offensive.

Guy Gilboa-Dalal and Alon Ohel were kidnapped during the October 2023 massacre and are two of 48 captives still believed to be held by Hamas, with 20 thought to still be alive.

Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has ordered his military to occupy the whole of Gaza, with troops and armour currently assaulting Gaza City, where around a million people lived before the war broke out.

On Friday, the IDF bombed a high-rise building in the city’s west that – without providing evidence – it said was being used by Hamas. The military claimed that civilians were warned beforehand.

Pictures from Gaza City show Palestinians running for safety as the building collapses.

Guy Gilboa-Dalal (right) and Alon Ohel. Pics: Bring Them Home Now
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Guy Gilboa-Dalal (right) and Alon Ohel. Pics: Bring Them Home Now

Hostages appear in video released by Hamas

The video was edited and featured an exhausted-looking Mr Gilboa-Dalal speaking for around three-and-a-half minutes.

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He appears in a car for some of the video and says that he is being held in Gaza City along with other hostages.

He says that he is afraid of being killed by Israel’s latest assault.

The video is dated 28 August. Sky News could not independently determine the date of recording.

Palestinians inspect the site of an Israeli strike on a tent, outside al Shifa Hospital, in Gaza City. Pic: Reuters
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Palestinians inspect the site of an Israeli strike on a tent, outside al Shifa Hospital, in Gaza City. Pic: Reuters

Mr Gilboa-Dalal appears to be in the backseat of a car that is being driven around. At one point, he identifies a passing building as one belonging to the Red Cross.

Hamas has refused to allow the Red Cross to see the hostages.

At one point, Mr Ohel, 24, is also seen.

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Israeli strike hits Gaza displacement camp

Family mark ‘sign of life’

In a statement, Mr Gilboa-Dalal’s family said: “We have received a sign of life from our Guy after six months since the previous video in which he was seen with Evyatar David watching their friends being released.

“Guy, Alon, and other hostages were transferred to Gaza, and we are deeply concerned for their lives. They must be brought home.”

But talks between Israel and Hamas via mediators – aimed at stopping the fighting and freeing the hostages – collapsed in July.

After the release of the video, Israeli opposition leader Yair Lapid urged Israeli negotiators to resume talks on a deal to free the hostages.

Read more:
Anger over Israeli president’s visit to UK

A diary of daily life in Gaza

Smoke rises as a building hit by an Israeli air strike collapses in Gaza City. Pic: Reuters
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Smoke rises as a building hit by an Israeli air strike collapses in Gaza City. Pic: Reuters

Strike on high-rise building

The release of the hostage video comes as the Israeli military continues its attack on Gaza City, where residents say it bombed a high-rise tower on Friday.

The building’s management said it was being used for displaced people and denied it had been used for anything other than civilian purposes.

Footage of the strike showed the building collapsing and sending thick clouds of smoke billowing over nearby tent camps.

Father-of-two Ismail, from the city’s Sheikh Radwan neighbourhood, told Reuters that his family feared they would not be able to return if they fled.

“We pray for a ceasefire,” he said.

More than 64,000 Palestinians have been killed in the Gaza Strip since the war began, Gaza health authorities say.

The war was sparked by Hamas’ attack on Israel, when militants killed 1,200 people and took around 250 hostages.

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Fifteen people killed after bus crashes off 1,000ft cliff in Sri Lanka

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Fifteen people killed after bus crashes off 1,000ft cliff in Sri Lanka

Fifteen people have been killed in Sri Lanka after a passenger bus veered off a 1,000ft cliff.

A further 16 people have been injured, including five children, a police spokesman said.

The crash took place on a mountain road near the town of Wellawaya, around 280km east of the capital Colombo, on Thursday night.

The spokesman said an initial police investigation has revealed the bus was travelling at a high speed when its driver lost control.

A map showing the town of Wellawaya, in Sri Lanka, where the bus crashed
Image:
A map showing the town of Wellawaya, in Sri Lanka, where the bus crashed

He added that the bus crashed into another vehicle and the road’s guardrails, before toppling off the cliff.

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Local television footage showed the severely damaged bus lying at the bottom of the precipice as rescue crews – including soldiers, police officers and volunteers – removed the injured people throughout the night.

Deadly bus accidents are common in Sri Lanka, especially in the island nation’s mountainous regions, often due to poorly maintained and narrow roads, and reckless driving.

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