00:17 EDT, 3 March 2021
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The estranged husband accused of chasing his policewoman wife down the street and stabbing her was on bail for domestic violence offences at the time, a court heard.
Daily Mail Australia can reveal Simon Allan Davis, 48, will be sentenced next Monday on separate charges of stalking or intimidating, destroying or damaging property and breaching an apprehended violence order.
A magistrate in Sydney s west formally revoked Davis s bail for those charges on Tuesday afternoon, with the court hearing he had breached his agreement by contacting witnesses.
Police also hit Davis with apprehended violence orders on behalf of four women, including his wife Constable Tina Davis, one of her fellow police officers who was allegedly threatened during this week s incident, another woman and a relative.
A man will face court from his hospital bed after he allegedly stabbed a woman during a domestic-related attack in Sydney s north-west last night.
The 46-year-old police officer, who was off-duty at the time, was stabbed multiple times in her car after meeting a man believed to be her ex-partner at Aberdeen Place in Stanhope Gardens.
Security footage capturing the incident shows the woman pulling up in a car to meet a man and a short time later, she is seen bolting from the car and calling for help with her alleged attacker chasing behind.
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CCTV captures moment a woman was stabbed by a man in Stanhope Gardens.(9News)
Constable Tina Davis, 46, ran for her life through Stanhope Garden in Sydney s north-west at about 8pm on Monday before Simon Allan Davis allegedly knifed her outside his home.
Standing up for stranded seafarers on UN Human Rights Day
UN Human Rights Day puts the global spotlight on the importance of human rights in the post-COVID recovery. IMO is highlighting the plight of the hundreds of thousands of seafarers who are still stranded at sea and has issued a strong call for their fundamental rights to be respected.
It is estimated that 400,000 seafarers are currently stranded on ships beyond the end of their original contracts and unable to be repatriated, due to COVID-related travel restrictions. Some have now been working at sea for over 18 months, well beyond the 11-month limit set out in ILO’s Maritime Labour Convention (MLC). A similar number of seafarers are stuck at home, unable to join ships and provide for their families.