Oxford News
Olympic star Laura Muir to headline Bannister Track Miles
She will compete in the Millicent Fawcett Mile at Iffley Road in Oxford on Bank Holiday Monday, May 4.
Muir will be aiming to break the track record of 4:27.79, set by Sonia O’Sullivan in 2004.
James Davies, Partner and Head of Blake Morgan’s Oxford office, who will be handing out medals on the day said: “We’re delighted to support Bannister Miles, a much-loved event rooted in Oxford’s sporting and community heritage.
“The Bannister family’s contribution to the city goes without saying, and it’s a privilege for our firm to play a small part in an occasion that brings so many people together.
“We’re really looking forward to Bank Holiday Monday and to welcoming runners, especially when it comes to handing out the medals at the finish.”
Muir is the UK national record holder over the mile with a personal best of 4:15.24.
UK Athletics’ Millicent Fawcett Mile is the premier trophy mile race in the country and forms part of the third annual Bannister Miles celebrations.
The event is named in honour of Dame Millicent Fawcett, who led the National Union of Women’s Suffrage Societies and was instrumental in securing women’s voting rights in 1918.
The day will feature a full programme of races, starting at 2.20pm, including junior, senior, steeplechase, and para events.
The elite men’s and women’s miles will begin from 5.45pm.
Spectators can attend free of charge and enjoy food, drink, and other activities throughout the afternoon.
Before the track events begin, more than 1,300 runners will take part in the Bannister Community Mile along the streets of Oxford, including more than 300 children.
This year’s event has proved especially popular with families, and after the first Family Wave sold out, organisers opened a second wave to meet demand.
The Family Waves will be started by Gordon Sanghera, the founder of the Sanghera Foundation, who this year have sponsored the event.
Their support has enabled Bannister Miles to provide free places to local school children.
The route starts at St Aldates from 9am, continues along the High Street, and finishes at Iffley Road.
Runners will collect their medals at the site where, 72 years ago, Sir Roger Bannister became the first person to run a sub-four-minute mile.
Medals will be handed out by partners of longstanding Bannister Miles supporter, local Oxfordshire law firm, Blake Morgan.
Entries for the community mile close at midnight on Friday, May 1.
All children under the age of six can enter free of charge.
Oxford News
Afghan man jailed for violent sexual offences in Wantage
Najeebullah Arab, of Mayfield Avenue in Grove, was sentenced for five counts of sexual offences committed against two women and a 14-year-old girl in Wantage, at Oxford Crown Court on Friday, June 19.
During the court’s sentencing remarks, Arab was disruptive to the court, began openly weeping and wailing, attempted to throw chairs and throw himself against the wall, and forced the judge to order him to be physically restrained and taken back down to the custody cells.
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The 40-year-old, who lived in Grove with his wife, mother and four children, committed the first offence on May 14, 2024.
Najeebullah Arab, jailed for committing violent sexual offences against women in Wantage (Image: Madeleine Evans)
He watched a 14-year-old girl who was waiting at a bus stop in the middle of the day until she was alone, when he approached her and began asking her questions.
This “quickly developed into a series of unsolicited and explicitly sexualised comments about her appearance”, including saying “you have a very nice body,” “you are very, very sexy” and “I love you”.
Despite the girl telling him she was 14, he asked her personal questions, including where she lived, and repeatedly pestered her to give her a phone number until she felt ‘sufficiently frightened’ to provide one ‘to make the encounter come to an end’.
She provided the man with her mother’s phone number, and in the following days he sent the number a series of sexual messages believing it was the young girl, asking her to delete the messages ‘so her parents would not see them’.
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While on court bail for this offence, Arab committed two violent sexual offences against other women, within the same week.
On January 21, he targeted a young woman walking alone at night, near her home in Grove.
He first watched her then approached under the pretext of asking for directions, before attacking her with his hands on her shoulders and neck and repeatedly trying to kiss her.
The woman shouted at him and was able to run away, immediately reporting the incident to the police.
“Unfortunately,” Judge Emma Nott KC said, “he could not be traced or apprehended before he kidnapped and raped his next victim within less than a week of this failed attempt.”
Judge Emma Nott KC (Image: Contributed)
On January 27, Arab approached a 19-year-old woman walking alone at night along a dark and largely empty road, starting by talking to her, but immediately escalating the situation.
He grabbed her, tried to kiss her and sexually assaulted her, and when she tried to resist, he grabbed her by the arm and took her away from the road.
Trying to avoid violence, she complied, but he then dragged her into a field where he “subjected her to a sustained sexual assault, culminating in rape”.
She was restrained and pinned to the ground by the offender’s full body weight, overpowering her. He then fled the scene on a bike, the court heard.
Judge Nott said: “This was a grave, degrading and deeply traumatising offence.”
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The two victims of Arab’s physical attacks attended the court in person to give their victim personal statement. Neither woman can be named for legal reasons.
Oxford Crown Court, St. Aldate’s. (Image: Contributed)
The victim of the sexual assault addressed the court from the stand. She said: “I have had intrusive thoughts about how bad this could have been, had I not escaped you.
“After I learned about the young woman you raped, I have thought about her every day and cannot imagine how she must feel.
“I was terrified that you would inflict more hell on others or on myself again.
“You ruined my sense of safety in a place I called home and I have had to live with reminders of you every day.”
The victim that Arab went on to sexually assault, kidnap and rape just days later spoke to the court from behind a screen.
In a moving statement, she said: “Why, why did you touch me?
“Is living wrong, is just wearing clothes wrong, is being a woman invitation to touch her and grope her, does being a woman mean I can never just exist?
“Does being a woman mean to be touched as if you are nothing, as if you are a piece of dust?”
Judge Nott praised their courage, resilience and endurance to go through the legal system to see Arab prosecuted, describing them as ‘heroines’ rather than victims.
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The court heard how the Afghan national had worked for the British government’s Ministry of Defence as a mechanic in Afghanistan for 20 years before he was captured by the Taliban and tortured.
He and his family were brought to the UK by the government for their own safety.
Judge Emma Nott KC said his background provided no excuse for the serious offences he committed against the women and girl and said he showed ‘opportunistic and predatory behaviour escalating overtime, worsened by entrenched attitudes towards women and girls concerning entitlement, boundaries and consent’.
Arab was sentenced to nine years and seven months respectively for rape and kidnapping, 12 months to run consecutively to that for two counts of sexual assault, and a further five months to run consecutively for sexual communication with a child.
The total sentence of 10 years and 11 months was extended by the judge on licence for a further six years as Arab was considered a ‘dangerous offender’.
He received a Sexual Harm Prevention Order to last 20 years and restraining orders for each victim for life.
Oxford News
Bin collection warning issued for Oxfordshire households
With the hot weather returning to the UK this week, West Oxfordshire District Council has warned some bin collections may be brought forward to earlier in the day.
The authority says this will allow crews to carry out their work safely while avoiding the hottest part of the day.
Temperatures are expected to climb back up to 30C on select days next week, with the government issuing a heat health warning.
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A spokesman for the council said: “To ensure your waste is collected, we kindly ask residents to place their bins out the night before their scheduled collection day, or by no later than 6am.
“You can check your collection day online: https://www.westoxon.gov.uk/…/check-your-collection-day/
“These temporary changes are determined by our waste contractor and are typically introduced during prolonged periods of high temperatures.
“We appreciate your understanding and cooperation in helping to keep our crews safe during warmer weather.”
An amber heat warning has been issued by the Met Office, scheduled for Monday, June 22 from 1am until 23.59pm on Tuesday, June 23.
The Met Office said: “Adverse health effects are likely to be experienced by those vulnerable to extreme heat”.
The forecaster also said motorists may see delays on roads plus anyone travelling by rail or air could also find journeys take longer.
Oxford News
Witney marks World Refugee Day by flying the Refugee Flag
The Refugee Flag was flown at Witney Town Hall to mark World Refugee Day.
Mayor Councillor Jane Doughty and Deputy Mayor Councillor Sandra Simpson raised the flag in support of refugees living in Witney and around the world.
World Refugee Day is observed annually on June 20 and celebrates the strength and courage of people who have been forced to flee their home country to escape conflict or persecution.
In an online post, Witney Town Council said: “This morning, the Mayor, Cllr Jane Doughty, and the Deputy Mayor, Cllr Sandra Simpson, raised the Refugee Flag at the Town Hall, marking World Refugee Day.
“The flag is raised every year on the flagpole as a gesture of solidarity with the refugee community here in Witney and across the world.”
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