Description
Added on the 30/12/2022 16:06:02 - Copyright : Euronews EN
Controversial influencer Andrew Tate and his brother, Tristan, arrive at the Bucharest tribunal on Wednesday, a day after being indicted in Romania for human trafficking and rape. Surrounded by bodyguards, who try to keep the media away, Andrew tells reporters "I believe in god and I believe in the justice system and we are all going to be ok". Along with Andrew and Tristan Tate, two women were also charged in the case, with Romania's anti-organised crime prosecution unit alleging that the defendents set up a criminal organisation and sexually exploited several women. IMAGES
Controversial British-American influencer Andrew Tate and his brother Tristan arrive at a Bucharest court of appeals, after their arrest by Romanian police over UK sex offence charges. Romanian authorities said in a statement that they executed "two European arrest warrants issued by the UK judicial authorities for the committing of sexual offences, of exploitation of persons on the territory of the UK". IMAGES
Controversial influencer Andrew Tate and brother Tristan are questioned by Romanian prosecutors from the anti-organised crime directorate (DIICOT) while having their electronic devices searched. It's the first time the two brothers have left house arrest, where they were placed more than a week ago after being released from a three-month long detention. Tate, a British-American former kickboxer with millions of online followers, along with his younger brother and two Romanian women, are under investigation for alleged human trafficking and rape. IMAGES
Controversial far-right social media personality Andrew Tate arrives at court in Bucharest with his brother Tristan to appeal their detention for alleged human trafficking, rape and forming a criminal group. The judge is expected to decide whether to keep the brothers in pre-trial detention or to release them. IMAGES
Kenyan police say they have arrested a suspect after the gruesome discovery of mutilated bodies in a Nairobi rubbish dump, and say he has confessed to killing 42 women. SOUNDBITE
Georgian police stand guard outside the country's parliament building as protestors against a "foreign agent" bill gather. Demonstrations have gripped the tiny Caucasus country for weeks over the bill targeting NGOs, dubbed the "Russian law" as it mirrors repressive legislation used by the Kremlin to silence critics. IMAGES