QUEEN CAMILLA'S RARE CONFESSION ABOUT PRIVATE DUTIES WITH 10 GRANDKIDS. (PHOTO).

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 Queen Camilla's rare confession about private duties with 10 grandkids Away from the public spotlight, Queen Camilla embraces her role as grandmother to ten grandchildren, balancing her royal duties with family life. She shares two children, Tom and Laura, with her former husband Andrew Parker-Bowles, and together they have five grandchildren: Lola, Freddy, Eliza, Louis, and Gus.  Through her marriage to King Charles, she also has five step-grandchildren Prince George, Princess Charlotte, Prince Louis, Prince Archie, and Princess Lilibet.  Despite her preference for keeping her private life separate, Camilla recently opened up about her passion for reading and her desire to pass that love down to future generations. During a visit to St Mungo’s in South East London, Camilla spoke about the importance of introducing children to books early, sharing how she reads to her youngest granddaughter.  The Queen’s Reading Room, her charity, has partnered with St Mungo’s to pr...

TUNISIAN COURT FREES NGO WORKERS ACCUSED OF AIDING MIGRANTS. (PHOTO)


Tunisian court frees NGO workers accused of aiding migrants


A Tunisian court has freed a group of humanitarian workers after handing them suspended sentences for facilitating the "illegal entry and residence" of migrants, a support committee said on Tuesday.


Sherifa Riahi, the former director of the NGO Terre d'Asile, and several members of her staff had already spent more than 20 months in jail by the time of their final hearing on Monday.


Hours after the hearing, Riahi's support committee posted a video of her leaving prison overnight, announcing her colleagues had also been freed.


Mahmoud Daoud Yaacoub, a member of Riahi's defence team, told AFP that the court had handed down a two-year suspended sentence to the defendants who were in pre-trial detention.


People outside courthouse


"Tomorrow we will learn the rest of the judgment regarding the defendants who are out on bail," he said, AFP reported.


The NGO employees were accused alongside 17 municipal workers from the eastern city of Sousse who were implicated for having lent premises to the organisation.


The 23 defendants, who were also charged with "conspiracy with the aim of housing or hiding people who entered clandestinely", had faced up to 10 years in prison.


Other charges, including ones alleging financial misdeeds, were previously dropped.


The defendants' lawyers had argued they were simply carrying out humanitarian work under a state-approved programme, in coordination with the government.


Key transit point


On the last day of the trial on Monday, a handful of people gathered outside the courthouse in support of the defendants. The final hearing lasted all day and as night fell, the court retired to consider the verdict.


The UN special rapporteur for human rights defenders, Mary Lawlor, had on Sunday urged "the authorities to release her (Riahi) instead of trying her on dubious charges related to her defence of migrant rights".


Migration is a sensitive issue in Tunisia, a key transit point for tens of thousands of people seeking to reach Europe each year.


The defendants were arrested in May 2024 along with about a dozen humanitarian workers.

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