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Zelensky vows overhaul of Ukraine's scandal-hit energy firms
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South Africa defy early red card to beat Italy
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Alex Marquez claims Valencia MotoGP sprint victory
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McIlroy shares lead with Race to Dubai title in sight
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Climate protesters rally in Brazil at COP30 halfway mark
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Spike Lee gifts pope Knicks jersey as pontiff meets film stars
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BBC caught in crossfire of polarised political and media landscape
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'Happy' Shiffrin dominates in Levi slalom for 102nd World Cup win
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Palestinian national team on 'mission' for peace in Spain visit
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Brazilian 'Superman' cheers child cancer patients in Ghana
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India close in on win over South Africa after Jadeja heroics
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Huge explosions rock industrial area near Argentina's capital
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Bezzecchi takes pole for Valencia sprint and MotoGP
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Dominant Shiffrin leads after first slalom run in Levi
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Nine killed in accidental explosion at Indian Kashmir police station
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Climate protesters to rally at COP30's halfway mark
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Fighting South Africa lose Rickelton after India 189 all out
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Harmer leads South Africa fightback as India 189 all out
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Prison looms for Brazil's Bolsonaro after court rejects his appeal
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EU bows to pressure on loosening AI, privacy rules
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India close in on lead despite South African strikes
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Curry's 49 points propel Warriors in 109-108 win over Spurs
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NZ boxer Parker denies taking banned substance after failed test
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Australia setback as Hazlewood ruled out of 1st Ashes Test
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Australia pace spearhead Josh Hazlewood ruled out of 1st Ashes Test
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UN Security Council to vote Monday on Trump Gaza plan
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Japan's Tomono leads after men's short program at Skate America
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China tells citizens to avoid Japan travel as Taiwan row grows
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Purdue Pharma to be dissolved as US judge says to approve bankruptcy
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Iran's first woman orchestra conductor inspires
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Wood gets all-clear in boost for England
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Golf's world No. 8 Thomas has back surgery
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Rebooted Harlem museum celebrates rise of Black art
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'Desperation in the air': immigrant comics skewer Trump crackdown
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UN regulator says shipping still wants to decarbonize -- despite US threats
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Grant, Kim share halfway lead in LPGA Annika tournament
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Musk's Grokipedia leans on 'questionable' sources, study says
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Trump signs order to lower tariffs on beef, coffee, other goods
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Croatia qualify for 2026 World Cup, Netherlands close, Germany in limbo
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'Last Chance U' coach dies after shooting: US police
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Sinner completes perfect ATP Finals group stage, Auger-Aliassime reaches last four
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Woltemade sends Germany past Luxembourg in World Cup qualifier
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Croatia qualify for 2026 World Cup with 3-1 win over Faroes
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Kai Trump makes strides but still misses cut in LPGA debut
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Return to bad days of hyperinflation looms in Venezuela
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US airspace recovers as budget shutdown ends
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Russia strike on Kyiv apartment block kills six, Ukraine says
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Arrest made in shooting of 'Last Chance U' coach: US police
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At COP30, senator warns US 'deliberately losing' clean tech race with China
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US, Switzerland say deal reached on trade and tariffs
France tries Algerian woman for rape and murder of 12-year-old girl
An Algerian woman apologised for her "horrible" actions Friday as she went on trial accused of raping and murdering a 12-year-old girl in Paris, in a case that sparked horror in France and was seized by the far right.
Dahbia Benkired, now aged 27, was detained after Lola Daviet went missing in the northeast of the French capital three years ago. The girl's body was then found in a trunk in the lobby of the building where her father and mother worked as caretakers.
Conservative and far-right politicians seized on the case to call for better immigration law enforcement, after Benkired was found to have overstayed a student visa and failed to comply with a notice to leave France.
The victim's mother has urged politicians to stop exploiting her daughter's death.
On Friday, the girl's family sat in court, wearing white T-shirts with a picture of a smiling child and the words: "You were the sun of our life, you will be the star of our nights."
"I am waiting for justice to be done," said Lola's mother Delphine Daviet.
One woman in her fifties broke down in tears when the defendant entered the dock.
"I apologise to the whole family," Benkired said in a monotone. "It's horrible what I did. I regret it."
She was found competent to stand trial.
- 'Selling a kidney' -
Although experts who evaluated Benkired's mental health noted her "manipulative behaviour" they said she did not suffer from any "major psychiatric disorder".
One of the victim's brothers, Thibaut Daviet, urged the accused to tell "all the truth and nothing but the truth".
Building residents saw Benkired in the lobby of the apartment block in the 19th district on October 14, 2022, carrying suitcases and a heavy trunk covered in a blanket, the investigation showed.
An hour and a half earlier, security footage showed Benkired approaching the girl as she returned from school, then leading her into the flat her sister occupied in the building.
Benkired raped and hit the schoolgirl with scissors and a box cutter, then bound her up in duct tape, including around her face, leading to her death by asphyxia.
She placed the body in a trunk and exited the building, pausing outside a cafe, where she told a client who suspected something strange in her luggage that she was "selling a kidney", investigators said.
She then convinced a friend to drive her and the bags to his home, before taking a taxi with the trunk back to the building where her sister lived. She fled when she saw police deployed in the area, but was arrested the next day.
- 'Twenty joints a day' -
In court, Benkired described growing up in a dysfunctional family, a childhood spent between Algeria and France, unloving aunts and a violent father.
She mentioned sexual abuse she allegedly suffered at the hands of a neighbour when she was 14, or "men who came to her aunts' house" in Algeria.
She settled in France in 2013 but had no stable job or residence.
Encouraged by her drug dealer boyfriend, she turned to prostitution and smoked cannabis.
"Twenty joints a day, it made me feel good," she said.
After a pause, she started smoking heavily again the week before the crime, she said.
According to a personality assessment seen by AFP, the death of her mother in 2020 had been a "turning point", with her life beginning to unravel.
She told investigators she had been angry with the girl's mother, who had refused to give her an entry badge for the building, after her sister had given her a key to her flat.
The probe showed she had conducted searches online into witchcraft days before the murder.
Benkired, whose trial is to last until next Friday, faces a maximum sentence of life in jail.
Ahead of the trial, anti-immigration activists unfurled a banner in front of the courthouse reading "I don't want to be next."
Members of extreme-right group, Les Natifs, filmed themselves tagging a nearby pavement with the words "Immigration kills our wives, our mothers and our sisters."
pab-abo-ng-ah-as/ah/giv
T.Samara--SF-PST