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Met police urge Epping sex offender spotted in London to hand himself in

2 days ago
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Police searching in London for a former asylum seeker and convicted sex offender who was released from prison in error have urged him to hand himself in.The Ethiopian national Hadush Gerberslasie Kebatu was jailed for 12 months in September for sexually assaulting a woman and a 14-year-old girl and made the subject of a five-year sexual harm prevention order.Kebatu, who was released wearing a prison-issued grey tracksuit and holding a plastic bag containing his possessions, has made several train journeys across London since he was freed on Friday, according to the Metropolitan police.A senior Met police officer made a direct appeal to Kebatu to contact the force, which was handed responsibility for the investigation on Saturday morning.“We want to locate you in a safe and controlled way,” said Commander James Conway.

“You had already indicated a desire to return to Ethiopia when speaking to immigration staff.The best outcome for you is to make contact directly with us by either calling 999 or reporting yourself to a police station.”He urged anyone “who sees him, knows where he is or has any information” to call 999 immediately, adding that police believe Kebatu “has access to funds, and critically, in both Chelmsford and London, sought assistance from members of the public, and has spoken to station staff”.In an update on Saturday evening, the Met said officers had now confirmed that Kebatu was last seen shortly before 8pm on Friday evening in the Dalston area of Hackney.“He was still wearing his prison-issue grey tracksuit top and bottoms, but is now carrying his belongings in a distinctive white bag with pictures of avocados on it,” the Met said.

“Additional officers have been deployed to the area to carry out further searches, but we are appealing for the help of local residents to report any sightings as soon as possible,”The 41-year-old was meant to be sent to an immigration detention centre to be deported but was released from HMP Chelmsford in Essex by mistake, it has emerged,A delivery driver has described seeing Kebatu return to HMP Chelmsford in a “very confused” state “four or five times”, only to be turned away by prison staff and directed to the railway station,The driver, named only as Sim, told Sky News that he saw Kebatu come out of the prison saying “Where am I going? What am I doing?” and hanging around for about 1½ hours as he tried to find out where he should be going,He said that Kebatu knew that he should be deported but the prison staff were “basically sending him away” and saying to him: “Go, you’ve been released, you go.

”The driver said: “He kept scratching his head and saying: ‘Where do I go, where do I go?’ The fourth or fifth time [he went into the reception] he was starting to get upset, he was getting stressed.I’m not sticking up for the guy, but in my eyes, he was trying to do the right thing.“He knew he was getting deported, but he didn’t know where he was going or how he should get there.”Kebatu appears to have been spotted later in Chelmsford town centre asking for assistance before getting on to a train to London.Essex police confirmed Kebatu was seen catching a train at Chelmsford railway station at 12.

41pm on Friday.Met police confirmed he was seen getting off the train in Stratford in east London at about 1.10pm on Friday.As a result, the Met was handed responsibility for the investigation on Saturday morning, the force said.Conway had said earlier that finding Kebatu was a “top priority” for the Met.

He added: “The manhunt is being led by an experienced senior investigating officer.He has teams from the specialist crime command with expertise in tracking down wanted people at his disposal, as well as other resources from across the Met.“We are examining CCTV from [Stratford] and farther afield, including on the transport network, to establish information about his subsequent movements.”Sign up to First EditionOur morning email breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what’s happening and why it mattersafter newsletter promotionA statement from Essex police on Saturday morning said that officers had “worked through the night” to track Kebatu’s movements, including “scouring hours of CCTV footage”.Prison Service sources said the release from HMP Chelmsford was caused by human error.

It is understood the prison officer who authorised the release has been removed from duties while an urgent investigation takes place.According to the Telegraph, Kebatu was wrongly categorised as a prisoner due to be released on licence and handed a £76 discharge grant.One prison source described the incident as a “disaster waiting to happen” because of the high volume of releases being processed by inexperienced staff, and dozens of prisoners serving different tariffs being released at the same time.Aaron Stowe, the president of the Criminal Justice Workers’ Union (CJWU), called Kebatu’s mistaken release “a profound failure of duty”.He said: “The release of Hadush Kebatu is a betrayal of the victims, the community, and the principles of justice.

We demand a full investigation and immediate reforms to ensure this never happens again.”Mike Rolfe, the CJWU’s general secretary, added: “The justice system is stretched to breaking point, the public’s confidence is collapsing, and those tasked with enforcing the law are left to pick up the pieces of political cowardice.”The father of Kebatu’s teenage victim told Sky News: “The justice system has let us down.”A report by HM Inspectorate of Prisons after an inspection in January and February 2024 said HMP Chelmsford faced “considerable pressures” because of “national capacity issues”, while suffering staff shortfalls in reception and the pre-release team.A spokesperson for the Prison Service said it had launched an investigation into the incident and was “urgently working” with police to return Kebatu to custody, adding in a statement: “Public protection is our top priority.

”The prime minister, Keir Starmer, said the release was “totally unacceptable” and that he was “appalled”,Annual government data for prisons shows that 262 prisoners were released in error in the year to March 2025, an increase of 128% on the previous year,Kebatu was found guilty of five offences last month after attempting to kiss a 14-year-old girl twice, before sexually assaulting her, and sexually assaulting a woman and trying to kiss her too,He committed the offences just days after arriving in the UK on a small boat and taking up residence at the Bell hotel in Epping,His case triggered protests outside the hotel, which far-right activists sought to exploit, leading to assaults on police officers and 32 arrests.

At his trial, the district judge Christopher Williams said Kebatu posed a “significant risk of reoffending”, was “manipulative”, and had acted “ignorantly and repulsively” towards the woman he had assaulted.He was sentenced to 12 months in prison and had served just 31 days when he was released.
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Could the internet go offline? Inside the fragile system holding the modern world together

It is the morning after the internet went offline and, as much as you would like to think you would be delighted, you are likely to be wondering what to do.You could buy groceries with a chequebook, if you have one. Call into work with the landline – if yours is still connected. After that, you could drive to the shop, as long as you still know how to navigate without 5G.A glitch at a datacentre in the US state of Virginia this week reminded us that the unlikely is not impossible

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Amazon strategised about keeping its datacentres’ full water use secret, leaked document shows

Executives at world’s biggest datacentre owner grappled with disclosing information about water used to help power facilitiesAmazon strategised about keeping the public in the dark over the true extent of its datacentres’ water use, a leaked internal document reveals.The biggest owner of datacentres in the world, Amazon dwarfs competitors Microsoft and Google and is planning a huge increase in capacity as part of a push into artificial intelligence. The Seattle firm operates hundreds of active facilities, with many more in development despite concerns over how much water is being used to cool their vast arrays of circuitry.Amazon defends its approach and has taken steps to manage how efficient its water use is, but it has faced criticism over transparency. Microsoft and Google regularly publish figures for their water consumption, but Amazon has never publicly disclosed how much water its server farms consume

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AI models may be developing their own ‘survival drive’, researchers say

When HAL 9000, the artificial intelligence supercomputer in Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey, works out that the astronauts onboard a mission to Jupiter are planning to shut it down, it plots to kill them in an attempt to survive.Now, in a somewhat less deadly case (so far) of life imitating art, an AI safety research company has said that AI models may be developing their own “survival drive”.After Palisade Research released a paper last month which found that certain advanced AI models appear resistant to being turned off, at times even sabotaging shutdown mechanisms, it wrote an update attempting to clarify why this is – and answer critics who argued that its initial work was flawed.In an update this week, Palisade, which is part of a niche ecosystem of companies trying to evaluate the possibility of AI developing dangerous capabilities, described scenarios it ran in which leading AI models – including Google’s Gemini 2.5, xAI’s Grok 4, and OpenAI’s GPT-o3 and GPT-5 – were given a task, but afterwards given explicit instructions to shut themselves down

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