Skip to Content Facebook Feature Image

Serious violence in Australia: retarded girl beaten and forced to swallow glass

News

Serious violence in Australia: retarded girl beaten and forced to swallow glass
News

News

Serious violence in Australia: retarded girl beaten and forced to swallow glass

2018-01-23 17:03 Last Updated At:17:03

Those bastards!

A 17-year-old retarded girl living in Victoria, Australia, was taken to a park in a small town Moe and beaten violently by other three girls.

online photo

online photo

These three merciless girls constantly hit the victim's head against a desk and brutally kicked her in the face. The poor retarded girl's hands were burned by the fire of the barbecue and her iPhone was smashed to pieces. They even forced her to swallow glass. After the crime, they even uploaded the video on social media for fun.

online photo

online photo

The poor girl was found then sent to the hospital after the accident and gradually recovered. "we can't even recognize her face for it is too swollen," her mother was in extreme grieve and said, "my daughter will no longer return to what she used to be after this horrible attack."

online photo

online photo

Police have arrested the three perpetrators, two of them are 15-year-old while one is only 12. They were accused of violent assault and robbery.

This case is regarded as the most serious violence in Australia in recent 30 years.

online photo

online photo

SYDNEY (AP) — A judge denied bail Thursday to a 15-year-old boy alleged to be in a network planning terrorist acts and who claimed to be a friend of another teen accused of stabbing a Sydney bishop last month.

The attack on the bishop triggered an investigation that led to the arrests of six teens, ages 14 to 17, who were charged last week with a range of offenses including conspiring to engage in or planning a terrorist act. All remain in custody.

The 15-year-old boy’s lawyer Ahmed Dib had applied for bail Wednesday in the Parramatta Children’s Court, arguing there were exceptional circumstances that required his client's release.

But Magistrate James Viney ruled such circumstances did not exist. “There is an unacceptable risk to the protection of the community,” Viney said.

Viney said he found the boy’s alleged threats to stab Jewish or Assyrian people, a predominantly Christian ethnic group native to the Middle East, and an alleged assault to be “gravely concerning.”

“The messages clearly set up the young person wanting to do something catastrophic,” Viney said.

The boy was already in custody on an assault charge when the terrorism-related charge was added Friday.

Earlier last week, he was accused of being part of group that threw rocks at a liquor store employee. The boy allegedly threw a wooden plank that narrowly missed his intended target. The boy was allegedly carrying a knife at the time.

Prosecutor Rebekah Rodger said the boy had told associates in an encrypted chat group that the 16-year-old boy accused of stabbing an Assyrian Orthodox bishop and priest on April 15 was “my mate.”

Later, the boy's lawyer, Dib, told reporters he would apply for bail to the New South Wales state Supreme Court.

The documents Dib had submitted as evidence of his client’s special circumstances showed the boy had a history of behavioral issues, lacked confidence and had low self-esteem.

The boy propped his head up with his hand for much of the hearing as he watched on from custody via videolink, as his parents sat in court.

Viney said he had “no doubt” the parents were both loving and supportive of their son, and had confiscated his phone after becoming concerned by his behavior.

“They are genuinely shocked as to the charges he’s facing,” Viney said.

At the end of the hearing, the mother left the courtroom in tears.

Police alleged the six teens arrested last week all “adhered to a religiously motivated, violent extremist ideology” and were part of a network that included the boy who is accused of the stabbing in the Christ the Good Shepherd Church as a service was being streamed online. Neither the bishop nor priest suffered life-threatening injuries.

The boy arrested in the stabbings was charged with committing a terrorist act four days after the attack that triggered a riot outside the church.

FILE - Security officers stand guard outside Orthodox Assyrian church in Sydney, Australia, April 15, 2024. Four teenagers plotted to buy guns and attack Jewish people days after a bishop was stabbed in a Sydney church, according to police documents cited in news reports on Monday, April 29, 2024. (AP Photo/Mark Baker, File)

FILE - Security officers stand guard outside Orthodox Assyrian church in Sydney, Australia, April 15, 2024. Four teenagers plotted to buy guns and attack Jewish people days after a bishop was stabbed in a Sydney church, according to police documents cited in news reports on Monday, April 29, 2024. (AP Photo/Mark Baker, File)

Judge denies bail to teen charged with terror-related offenses after stabbings at Sydney church

Judge denies bail to teen charged with terror-related offenses after stabbings at Sydney church

FILE - Flores sit on a fence outside the Christ the Good Shepherd church in suburban Wakely in western Sydney, Australia, on April 16, 2024. A 15-year-old boy who claimed to be a friend of a teen accused of stabbing a Sydney bishop applied Wednesday, May 1, 2024 to be released from custody on bail on a charge of planning a terrorist attack. (AP Photo/Mark Baker, File)

FILE - Flores sit on a fence outside the Christ the Good Shepherd church in suburban Wakely in western Sydney, Australia, on April 16, 2024. A 15-year-old boy who claimed to be a friend of a teen accused of stabbing a Sydney bishop applied Wednesday, May 1, 2024 to be released from custody on bail on a charge of planning a terrorist attack. (AP Photo/Mark Baker, File)

Judge denies bail to teen charged with terror-related offenses after stabbings at Sydney church

Judge denies bail to teen charged with terror-related offenses after stabbings at Sydney church

Recommended Articles