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Qatar’s World Cup promises fun — but without pleasure .
Fans traveling to watch the global soccer championship have been warned not to bring a number of items that are reportedly banned in Qatar, the site of 2022’s World Cup. Those caught with any one of the verboten items could face prison time, according to an official memo.
“Importing drugs, alcohol, pornography, pork products and religious books and material into Qatar is illegal,” reads the UK Foreign Travel Advice government website .
Beer, it is noted, will be served at designated locations , including inside stadiums during games, but prohibited elsewhere.
“Swearing and making rude gestures are considered obscene acts and offenders can be jailed and/or deported,” the site continues. “Take particular care when dealing with the police and other officials.”
The site goes on to list several cautions for visitors, such as refraining from public displays of intimacy, and it offers advice on how to dress according to Islamic code.
“You should dress modestly when in public, including while driving. Women must cover their shoulders and avoid wearing short skirts,” instructs the website.
“Both men and women are advised not to wear shorts or sleeveless tops, when going to government buildings, health-care facilities or malls.”
The list of banned items makes headlines as controversy continues to swirl around the decision to make Qatar the host country of the World Cup. The tournament, which historically takes place every four years between May, June and July, had to be shifted to November 2022 due to Qatar’s punishingly hot climate.
Besides the harsh playing conditions, fans have also criticized the Persian Gulf state’s stance on homosexuality and human rights, accusing organizers of putting profit over people. Just days ago, a Qatar World Cup ambassador told German television network ZDF that homosexuality is “damage in the mind.”
Ex-FIFA president Joseph “Sepp” Blatter commented that picking Qatar as host country had been a “mistake.”
“It was a bad choice. And I was responsible for that as president at the time,” said Blatter.
The 2022 World Cup kicks off Sunday, Nov. 20, 2022.
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Police issue childhood video of Natalie Pearman 30 years after murder
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Published: 18:16 GMT, 17 November 2022 | Updated: 19:20 GMT, 17 November 2022
Childhood pictures of a teenage sex worker who was murdered 30-years-ago have been released by police in the hope that they may prompt someone to name her killer.
Natalie Pearman, 16, was last seen at around 1.15am on November 20, 1992, in the red light area of Rouen Road, Norwich, Norfolk.
A lorry driver found her body dumped beside woodland in a layby on Ringland Road at the Ringland Hills beauty spot on the outskirts of the city at 3.50am the same day.
A post mortem later revealed she had been asphyxiated, but her killer has never been found, despite a DNA sample of the suspected murderer being on her body
There has been speculation that she was killed by Suffolk Strangler serial killer Steve Wright who murdered five prostitutes in November and December 2006 around 50 miles away in Ipswich.
Natalie Pearman, 16, was last seen at around 1.15am on November 20, 1992, in the red light area of Rouen Road, Norwich, Norfolk
A lorry driver found her body dumped beside woodland in a layby on Ringland Road at the Ringland Hills beauty on the outskirts of the city at 3.50am the same da
Suffolk Police insisted after forklift driver Wright's conviction for five murders in 2008 that they had no evidence to link him to any other cases.
But it has since been reported that he was the man arrested in July last year on suspicion of the murder of Vicky Hall, 17, who was found strangle din a ditch after disappearing while walking from a nightclub to her home in Trimley, Suffolk.
Natalie's younger sister Georgina, now 35, gave family photographs to Norfolk Police showing her smiling as a young girl with her siblings and riding a horse.
Officer said the snaps which have never been shared publicly before were being released 'in a bid to encourage people to come forward with new information 30 years on from her murder'.
Georgina who asked for her surname not to be revealed said: 'Natalie was only 16 when she died. She was just a child.
'Someone somewhere knows something about her murder. Thirty years is a long time. It's long enough and it's time for someone to tell the police the truth.
'Even if the person responsible for her death has died, we just want to know what happened.
'It's been amazing looking at these photos again, she looks so happy. For all the negativity often associated with her name over the years, Natalie is happy in these photos and that's nice to see for me, my brothers and sister. It's also heart-breaking.
'Natalie was so much more than how she died. She loved horses and horse-riding, she was an incredibly gifted artist and a much-loved sister, daughter, and friend.
'When something like this happens, it affects everything and everybody. Natalie had family and friends, and her death has overshadowed all our lives.
'Nobody can take away the 30 years of pain my family has been through but it's time to give us some closure.'
Georgina who was five-years-old when Natalie died, still lives in Norfolk with her husband and their two young sons.
Natalie's family has released photographs of her as a child in an effort to publicise her case
Police believe they found the killer's DNA on Natalie's body but they have been unable to find a match
Norfolk Police said the murder investigation has never been closed and an appeal on the 25th anniversary prompted 56 telephone calls and emails resulting in officers taking 11 DNA profiles from men who had been named as been involved
Police recovered a DNA profile from Natalie's body in 1992 and loaded it onto the national DNA database.
A Norfolk Police spokesperson said: 'The investigation into Natalie's death has never been closed and has been subject to reviews since 1992.
'Subsequent enquiries have included interviewing more than four thousand people and a large number provided samples for DNA testing.
'The 25 year anniversary appeal in 2017 received an encouraging response with Norfolk Police receiving 56 telephone calls and emails and, as a result, 11 new DNA profiles were taken from men whose names had been put forward as being potentially involved.
'Another 30 names of interest were confirmed as already on the national database and were known to the enquiry.
'Officers have also revisited original witnesses and several new ones who did not come forward in 1992.
'Sadly, neither police enquiries nor the names put forward have identified the person responsible for Natalie's murder.'
Norfolk Police's Cold Case Manager, Andy Guy said: 'Natalie was little more than a child when she was murdered and her family deserve to know what happened, and who was responsible for her death'
Mr Guy said a phone call with one name could solve this case
Norfolk Police's Cold Case Manager, Andy Guy said: 'Natalie was little more than a child when she was murdered and her family deserve to know what happened, and who was responsible for her death.
'I'd ask anyone with information that may help explain the circumstances surrounding her death to share this with us.
'We have what we believe is the DNA from the man that killed Natalie. One call with one name could resolve this case.
'There must be people who know or strongly suspect who was responsible, and I'm sure that plays heavily on their conscience. I would also be interested to hear of any rumours that circulated regarding Natalie following her murder. Please do the right thing and help bring closure to Natalie's family.'
Anyone with information can contact Norfolk Constabulary's Cold Case team by emailing unsolvedcasereviews@norfolk.police.uk or telephoning 01953 423819.
Alternatively, people can call Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555111 or share the information with Norfolk Police via an online portal here: https://mipp.police.uk/operation/363719P01-PO1
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Published by Associated Newspapers Ltd
Part of the Daily Mail, The Mail on Sunday & Metro Media Group
Wednesday to Blood, Sex & Royalty: the seven best shows to stream this week
Deadly, and great fun … Jenna Ortega in Wednesday. Photograph: © 2022 Netflix, Inc./Netflix
Original reporting and incisive analysis, direct from the Guardian every morning
© 2022 Guardian News & Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. (modern)
The Addams Family gets a glorious reboot with Jenna Ortega and Catherine Zeta-Jones, while Netflix gifts us another racy docudrama hot on the heels of The Crown. Plus: Morgan Freeman narrates Our Universe
“They haven’t built a school strong enough to hold me. I doubt this one will be any different.” This reboot of The Addams Family from the master of the theatrically sinister, Tim Burton, focuses on the enigmatic teenage daughter Wednesday (Jenna Ortega). She’s been thrown out of her regular high school after an incident with some deadly flesh-eating fish and enrolled at a performatively gothic “school for outcasts” – the alma mater of her mother Morticia (Catherine Zeta-Jones). Here, the cliques are divided into supernatural categories (vampires, werewolves etc) and Wednesday’s glorious disdain for all other students will be tested to destruction. Great fun. Phil Harrison Netflix, from Wednesday 23 November
This generation-spanning love story is inspired by Japanese pop superstar Hikaru Utada ’s two songs First Love and Hatsukoi. They are separated by 19 years, but the screen story has an even wider narrative scope. Jumping between three decades, it takes in the first meeting of Harumichi Namiki (Takeru Satoh) and Yae Noguchi (Hikari Mitsushima), their growing attraction and their separation. But as the two protagonists wallow in their memories, might redemption be possible? Can their love be rekindled? It’s tasteful, idealised and at times, a little antiseptic: romance as designed by Marie Kondo. PH Netflix, from Thursday 24 November
Paging Morgan Freeman! Netflix has an uplifting, beautifully shot new series about life, the universe and pretty much everything – all it needs is a narrator. Freeman, of course, rises to the occasion, lending his impossibly grave and sonorous tones to this epic, frequently eye-popping series. The emphasis here is on connections: from the stars to the oceans and the big bang to the tiniest plant growing in the desert, what irresistible forces and processes link all life on Earth? It’s undeniably spectacular and admirably ambitious stuff. PH Netflix, from Tuesday 22 November
The streamer has clearly decided that royal-based semi-fiction is the way to go: hot on the heels of season five of The Crown comes this racy docudrama based on the scurrilous but arguably proto-feminist life of Anne Boleyn. The dramatic segments are led by Amy James-Kelly’s Anne, but there are slightly awkward inserts involving historians offering thoughts on the context of the fictionalised action. It might have worked better as a basic drama – as it is, the show struggles to gather momentum as either history or entertainment. PH Netflix, from Wednesday 23 November
Implausible feats of vigilante guerrilla warfare in this thriller starring Jessica Ann Collins as Amber Chesborough, an American scientist who has been captured in the middle of a bloody conflict on the Colombia-Venezuela border. It falls to her husband Prince (Michiel Huisman) and her misleadingly named brother Bambi ( Luke Evans ) to save her. Fortunately, the pair are former special forces soldiers. Echo 3 is the creation of Zero Dark Thirty writer Mark Boal and the tone (underground political intrigue meets sweaty ultraviolence) is comparable. PH Apple TV+, from Wednesday 23 November
Proving to be more than a simple but joyous one-hit lockdown wonder , David Tennant and Michael Sheen’s snappy series – in which they play themselves – returns for a third season. Still directed and written by Simon Evans (who also stars), the newest collection of 15-minute shorts sees real-life pals David and Michael return to normal life. Simon – whose work schedule needs filling – pitches a Christmas radio drama to the pair. The only problem is that they’ve made it clear they no longer want anything to do with him … Hollie Richardson BritBox, from Thursday 24 November
This two-part crime documentary possesses all the twists and turns of a melodrama but, sadly, is both true and, to this day, unresolved. Patricia Hall went missing from her home in Pudsey, West Yorkshire in 1992. Her husband, Keith, was immediately a suspect and the subject of a controversial honey trap that led to a game of cat and mouse with the police. But still, no evidence tied him to the crime. So what really happened to Patricia? The programme hears from Keith Hall, Patricia’s sister Christine and other key protagonists as they process this ongoing tragedy. PH Prime Video, from Friday 25 November
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