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https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/man-charged-rape-murder-nursery-24370056?utm_source=mirror_newsletter&utm_campaign=12at12_newsletter2&utm_medium=email

Man charged with rape and murder of nursery worker, 39, with shocked pre-school shut

Andrew Grimes, 37, is charged with the murder and rape of 39-year-old Sophie Cartlidge who was found dead at her home in Bottesford, Scunthorpe, on Friday morning

By Peter Craig, Matthew Dresch & Jamie Waller

10:59, 22 JUN 2021

A man has been charged with the rape and murder of a 'beautiful' nursery worker who he lived with.  Sophie Cartlidge, 39, was found dead at her home in Bottesford, Scunthorpe, on Friday morning.  Andrew Grimes, 37, from Scunthorpe, appeared in Grimsby Magistrates' Court to face one charge of murder and two charges of rape, GrimsbyLive reports.  Police went to Sophie's home after receiving reports of concern for a person's safety.  The property was shared by Sophie and Andrew, although the defendant had a separate address, police said.  Officers said no weapons were involved in the mum's death although she had suffered significant injuries.  Sophie, who worked at Little Acorns Pre-School in Broughton, Leicestershire, has been described as the 'kindest and loveliest woman' in touching tributes.  In court, Grimes spoke only to confirm his age and address and no pleas were entered to any of the charges.  Prosecutor Martin Howarth appearing on a video link, told the court the case had to be referred to the Hull Crown Court within 48 hours.  He requested magistrates to preside over the referral to Hull.  Defence lawyer Andrew Havery made no application after speaking to his client earlier.  He was remanded in custody to reappear at Hull Crown Court on Wednesday.  The nursery posted on social media: “We are devastated to have lost our friend and colleague Sophie on Friday, June 18.  We have spoken with all parents of Little Acorns to inform them of this week's closure.  We ask at this time for your continued patience and understanding while her friends and family grieve their loss.  We thank those that have laid flowers at the setting.  Updates will be given by the committee as we continue to support our team.”

The nursery will be closed for a week as her friends and colleagues mourn the tragic loss.  One mum, whose son attended the nursery, said: “This really has broken my heart, this beautiful woman had such an impact on my son’s life. Sophie was always his favourite at nursery and they had such a special bond.  She was adored by absolutely everyone. She lit a room with her bubbly personality and the children doted on her.  Sophie wasn’t his key worker but she was always his favourite. They had a beautiful bond and she was absolutely incredible at her job.  To this day, whenever I saw her, she always asked how he was and couldn’t wait to see him again.  What a beautiful lady and teacher this lady was to me and my son.  Truly heart-breaking how someone so loved and appreciated can be taken away from a world.  Rest in peace Sophie. Thank you for being so special and a big part of my son’s life, he for sure absolutely adored you. You were truly amazing at your job, we was lucky enough to know you.”

Floral tributes have been left opposite Sophie's home on Baldwin Avenue, where police are continuing to maintain a presence.  Dozens of tributes have also been left online by those that knew her.  One woman said the news had "truly broken my heart. So sorry this happened to a beautiful, kind woman.  Sophie was an amazing lady who worked in my son's nursery and she will be extremely missed. Sending so much love and prayers to her friends and family and all the little lives she’s helped shape."

Another parent said: “Sophie has helped so many, she really did have a heart of gold and will be truly missed by all.”

"Sophie was loved by all such a friendly lady and adored by all children. She will be sadly missed and remembered by all."

Emergency services arrived at the scene around 9.10am on Friday, June 18 after reports of concern for a person's safety.  Police said that no weapons were involved, but that Sophie suffered significant injuries at the property she shared with Andrew.  Detective Chief Inspector Grant Taylor said: “Our thoughts remain with Sophie’s family and loved ones who continue to be supported by our specialist trained officer at this sad time.  This is an isolated incident and there is no wider risk to members of the public.  Our neighbourhood teams will continue to support and speak to local residents, if you see our officers please come and speak them if you have any concerns.  I want to say thank you to those who have helped with our enquiries throughout our investigation.”

62
https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/model-23-killed-vicious-attack-24353561?utm_source=mirror_newsletter&utm_campaign=12at12_newsletter2&utm_medium=email

Model, 23, killed in 'vicious attack' as man's body found nearby in 'murder-suicide'

The woman, named locally as Gracie Spinks, was found close to a farm in Duckmanton, Derbyshire, and two hours later a man in his 30s was discovered dead several fields away in a suspected murder-suicide

ByTim Hanlon, Chris Kitching Senior News Reporter & Nathan Warby

11:27, 19 JUN 2021Updated21:19, 19 JUN 2021

A keen horse rider and part-time model has died after being found injured in a field in a suspected murder-suicide.  The woman, named locally as Gracie Spinks, 23, was treated by paramedics close to a farm in the village of Duckmanton, Derbyshire, but they were unable to save her.  She was treated at 8.40am while a man in his 30s was found just over two hours later at around 11am, several fields away.  Gracie is understood to have been looking after her horse, called Paddy, when she was fatally injured, Derbyshire Live reported.  The incident led to the picturesque village going into lockdown with children at a primary school not allowed outside but by early afternoon police had said that the situation had been “resolved”.  Tributes have poured in for Gracie with friends saying her life revolved around horses and in particular her favourite Paddy, while she took part in show jumping and dressage.  A village resident told the Daily Mail: "The word locally is that this was a very vicious attack.  Gracie kept at least one horse on the land it is grazing land where a number of people have horses and there is a temporary stable.  As I understand it, Gracie was looking after her horse when she was attacked. It is just awful."

She reportedly was a part-time model and worked at a local e-commerce company.  Flowers were laid outside her family home and friends posted tributes on social media.  One pal wrote on Facebook: “Oh Gracie Spinks I don’t even know what to say. Heartbroken doesn’t even cut it.  You really were the life of the party, we made so many memories us four and I couldn’t be more grateful to know you.  Honestly sat here thinking of them is making me smile.  This world is so, so cruel and it’s really not fair. Rest in peace Gracie you will be so missed. Thinking of your family and friends.”

Another friend wrote: "Cannot even comprehend what has happened. Such a beautiful girl with a huge heart.  Rest in peace Gracie Spinks! You will always be the life and soul of a party. Sending a huge amount of love to all Gracie’s family and friends."

A third added: "Can’t believe it only seen you two days ago! Had a chat! This couldn’t have happened to a nicer person!!  Always supportive with everything I did! RIP Gracie Spinks my thoughts and condolences our to her family!"

Another friend described Gracie as "such a beautiful, kind & bubbly character who’s been taken far to soon".

The friend added: "Fly high sweet girl, sending love to all your family & friends at this heartbreaking time."

By Saturday afternoon, a GoFundMe page set up to help Ms Spinks’ family by Abbey Griffin, one of her friends, had raised more than £1,600.  Ms Griffin said: “Gracie was a beautiful girl at just 23 years old she had already touched so many people’s life and what gorgeous memories she leaves behind.  She was a caring and loving individual and was always happy to help. She was also so so stubborn and she’d always stand up for what was right.  If you knew Gracie you’d also know she was horsey mad and had the most gorgeous horse called Paddy whom she loved dearly.  Although no amount of money could ever bring Gracie back, I ask that you please donate what ever you can to help her family at this moment.  We all love you so dearly Gracie, behave up there.”

Ms Griffin also said she would be organising a balloon release from the Markham Vale business park, where Ms Spinks worked, on Monday June 28 to allow her friends to say their goodbyes.  Local residents told how they were left shocked and deeply upset.  One said: “The village was in shock, nobody could believe it. You had police coming and going, and all the rumours on Facebook. You didn’t know what to believe. Her poor family.”

A local business owner said: “You obviously hear all the rumours, but I was just hoping it wasn’t true. My heart goes out to them it really does."

Another resident said: “Its a terrible thing. I've lived here for years and I’ve never known anything like it. All I can think about is the family."

A Derbyshire police spokesman said it was believed the two deaths were linked and they were not looking for anyone else.  The force said in a statement: "Officers investigating the death of a woman in Duckmanton can now confirm that a body of a man was also found in the town and that we believe the two deaths are linked.  We are not looking for anyone else in connection with the deaths.  A woman was found injured in a field near to Staveley Road at around 8.40am. Paramedics attended and the woman, who was in her early 20s, sadly died at the scene.  At 11am, the body of a man in his mid-30s was found in a field off Tom Lane, Duckmanton.  We have traced and informed both families and specialist officers are supporting them at this time.  We appreciate that what has happened in Duckmanton will have shocked and upset many people in the community and officers will carry out extra patrols in the coming days.  We would urge you to stop and speak to an officer if you wish to raise any concerns.  Anyone with any information is asked to contact using the following methods quoting reference number 21*000338849."

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https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/my-daughter-10-sexually-abused-24325330?utm_source=mirror_newsletter&utm_campaign=12at12_newsletter2&utm_medium=email

'My daughter, 10, was sexually abused by pupil at school our complaints were shut down'

EXCLUSIVE: As bombshell report lays bare the rise of child-on-child harassment in classrooms, mum reveals her child's struggles after being groped in public

By Alex Bellott iNews Features Writer

10:39, 17 JUN 2021Updated10:42, 17 JUN 2021

When Angie* got a phone call from her daughter's school saying there had been an incident, she assumed it was nothing more than typical playground games.  Picking Clare* up at the gates, however, she was stunned to find her 10-year-old girl so shaken up that she was "unrecognisable".  "She came home unable to use the toilet, shower, eat - she was living underneath her bed," says Angie.

With her usually "happy, healthy, normal" daughter unable to speak about the incident, the devoted mum asked her to draw what had happened.  What Clare sketched out left Angie horrified. The young girl had been groped from behind in the chest and genitals in the playground by a male pupil of the same age, who later boasted to pals about his actions.  Reporting the incident to the school in 2017, though, Angie claims she was met with a wall of resistance and found "every system was failing" as she escalated their complaints up the chain.

Sexual harassment in schools 'normalised'

The family's story follows a bombshell Ofsted report that lays bare the harrowing rise of sexual harassment in schools, which inspectors say has become "normalised".  The review found children as young as 10 had shared nude pictures on apps including WhatsApp and Snapchat, while girls had experienced being groped in school corridors.  Amanda Spielman, the chief inspector of schools, said access to technology, social media and online pornography were “exacerbating factors” and that the problem was spreading to primary schools.  Most disturbingly, the report suggested young people often did not report sexual harassment as it happened so often, with one Year 12 pupil saying the spread of explicit pictures was so pervasive it was like “whack a mole”.  Geoff Barton, general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders, said there was a “gulf” between young people’s experiences of abuse and harassment, and the adult understanding of its severity.  He added: “Nobody can fail to be shocked by the finding that children and young people don’t see any point in reporting sexual harassment because it is seen as a normal experience.”

Complaints 'swept under the rug'

For Angie, who lives in Scotland, the findings come as no surprise. Weeks before Clare's incident, her class attended a lesson in which they were taught to report sexual abuse.  Yet when the mum and her daughter contacted the school about the incident, she says no action was taken against the boy and claims staff were eager to sweep the complaints "under the rug".

Clare's heartbreaking letter to school

Following her ordeal, Clare wrote a letter to her school outlining her struggles and how its lack of action impacted her:  "You don't know how much this has affected me. I have flashbacks, I can't clean myself properly, I don’t want to leave my house.  I want to go back to school because I miss all my friends that it took me a long time last year to get. I will miss all the fun. I really love my school and it's the longest school I've been to my whole life because we move countries so much. I love my teacher and my class.  In school we learned we have the right to feel safe and I don’t feel safe with him because the school hasn’t been able to cope with his bad behaviour and it keeps happening. No one does anything big to make it stop.  You taught us about child abuse and that no matter what age, what gender, it is still wrong. In Global Goals you taught us about gender equality. Why doesn't this apply to me?

After it happened I felt like I was no one, that I had no purpose in life and that I wasn’t meant to be in the world. I feel it's all my fault that it happened, even though people say it's not.  It's not fair that I’'m the one missing out on everything when I'm the one who did nothing wrong and I did the right thing."

"She had reported it right away because that's what she was educated to do. But you're educating young girls in a system that's not supportive once you report," says Angie.

"So everything they taught her totally contradicted what she then experienced. Education, education psychology, social services, police - I couldn't believe every system was failing her."

Angie who says she has never blamed the boy due to his age took her complaints to the police, but they could not prove sexual intent.  She then contacted the schools ombudsman, who conducted a six-month investigation.  She says the probe found the school had failed to follow child protection policy and procedure, take her daughter's experience into account and make decisions on behalf of her welfare.  But four years on, Angie says no measures have been taken to address the incident and that Clare continues to suffer the consequences.  "Still to this day my daughter is at the academy with this boy," she says. "He's 14 now and she's still experiencing eating lunch at school and boys coming up to her saying we're going to drag you into the bathroom and [abuse] you.  She still continues to report it because deep down she feels responsible now, she thinks things will change. But I don't."

'There will be a tipping point'

The Ofsted report compiled from reports of more than 900 young people in 32 state and private schools comes off the back of a growing scandal over abuse in schools.  Earlier this year, thousands of pupils shared anonymous stories of sexual harassment on the website Everyone's Invited.  Clare was one of the many teenage girls to post on the site. Angie believes it is an important tool in allowing pupils to feel "empowered and be heard", but says students have been forced to set up the grassroots movement because "no societal structures are taking ownership".

The mum consulted with a top Scottish lawyer, who told her there was no chance of taking her case to court as sexual motivation cannot be proven against a child.  But amid the growing reports of harassment, Angie is calling for children's rights to be further enshrined in law.  "I envision in future generations they'll look back at our generation and be like, 'I can't believe you allowed that to happen'.  At some point there will be a tipping point, probably girls being raped in the playground, because something big will have to happen for it to change and it has to be pretty drastic if those numbers aren't being taken seriously already."

She adds: "We're talking about all the taboos. It would be much easier and nicer to believe it's not happening.  It's almost to difficult to know how to tackle it because there's no villain in the piece. You don't want to believe a child would be capable of that, so there's nowhere to point the blame and we put it in the 'too hard' basket."

Abuse trauma triggered flashbacks

For brave Clare, speaking out about her experience has made her a "signpost" for other girls in her school who have experienced abuse but not reported it.  Parents aren't equipped to deal with this because it's not something we experienced in our generation," says Angie. "So what my daughter finds is that she goes to sleepovers and other girls say, 'Well that boy did the same thing to me, but I told my parents and they don't do anything about it.'"

Clare has suffered flashbacks since the abuse, and struggles to sit in a room unless her back is against the wall.  However, she has refused to move schools and has taken it upon herself to educate male pupils when they behave inappropriately towards her.  "This boy didn't have any accountability, he didn't have any consequences, so all you've done is educated whole classes of 10-year-old boys to think you can treat a girl like this and get away with this," says Angie.

"What she's learned is that it's her responsibility to have the restorative conversations with them, explain the impact it's had on her - and suck it up the next week when the same thing happens again."

Andrew Fellowes, associate head of policy at the NSPCC, says: "Angie and Clare’s experiences are heartbreaking. No child should have go to school fearful of being sexually abused by their schoolmates. But the sad reality is harmful sexual behaviour can occur in both primary and secondary schools.  All schools must be confident in recognising and responding to harmful sexual behaviour, with a focus on cultural change and intervening early to protect children and young people, not just responding to incidents after they occur, or even waiting for things to escalate until they are deemed serious.  This must be backed up with specialist, joined-up support services that help, like our Letting the Future In services which helps victims recover, along with other services that encourage young people to speak out about any concerns like our Speak Out Stay Safe assemblies.  The Relationships, Sex, and Health Education curriculum is an opportunity to provide positive, age appropriate messages in primary schools and build on them in secondary schools. But to succeed, the Government must be more ambitious to match the scale of the problem and support schools to confidently deliver it."

'We need a complete systems overhaul'

Responding to the Ofsted report, the UK Government said schools would be encouraged to take extra training days on the issues and tougher safeguarding rules would be produced.  Education Secretary Gavin Williamson said: “Sexual abuse in any form is completely unacceptable.  No young person should feel that this is a normal part of their daily lives schools are places of safety, not harmful behaviours that are tolerated instead of tackled.”

Angie insists there needs to be a total rethink about how child-on-child abuse is addressed.  "My daughter's story is a very good example in that you had a classic case," she says. "There is no grey area here it was black and white, it was public, he admitted to what he did, she reported it.  So while everything was going wrong, everything was going right and yet nothing changed. Clearly there has to be a complete system overhaul."

A spokesman for Education Scotland said it is working with the Scottish Government, local authorities and schools to ensure pupils receive "high-quality relationships, sexual health and parenthood education in schools".

It added: "The Mentors in Violence Prevention programme is a peer education programme led by Education Scotland funded by the Scottish Government Safer Communities Directorate providing young people with the language and a framework to explore and challenge attitudes, beliefs and cultural norms that underpin gender based violence, bullying and other forms of abuse.  Fifty five per cent of Scottish secondary schools have received staff training in the delivery of MVP, with an increasing number of schools being trained to support delivery in session 2021 – 2022.  Education Scotland will be delivering professional learning to help schools tackle technology-assisted problematic sexual behaviours. Education Scotland took over delivery of this professional learning from Stop it Now! in late Spring 2021 and publication of resources will follow in due course.”

*Names have been changed

Have you or a loved one been affected by sexual harassment in schools? Contact alex.bellotti@reachplc.com

Angie was supported by the NSPCC. The charity's Report Abuse in Education helpline can be reached on 0800 136 663 or by emailing help@nspcc.org.uk

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https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9700169/Caroline-Crouch-murder-Husband-hugs-mother-memorial-confessing-killing.html

Hugged by Caroline's 'killer': Mother of murdered Brit Caroline Crouch is consoled by her Greek son-in-law at memorial just hours before he admitted killing her in front of their baby and drowning their puppy as part of cover-up

    Babis Anagnostopoulos has confessed to the murder of wife Caroline Crouch
    Police say 33-year-old admitted smothering her to death when she threatened to leave him, before spending hours staging a burglary to hide his guilt
    But his story fell apart when data from Caroline's fitness tracker showed that her heart had stopped beating hours before the alleged break-in took place
    Babis was summoned for questioning while attending a memorial for his wife
    Video captured the moment he was led away, stopping to hug Caroline's mother

By Chris Pleasance and Nick Fagge and Jack Newman and Ross Ibbetson For Mailonline

Published: 09:22, 18 June 2021 | Updated: 11:16, 18 June 2021

This is the moment the husband of Caroline Crouch embraced her grieving mother during a memorial service for the murdered Briton, just hours before police say he admitted to being her killer.  Babis Anagnostopoulos, 33, had been on the island of Alonissos where Caroline grew up on Wednesday to attend the service alongside her family when police suddenly summoned him away to discuss a 'breakthrough' in the case.  Video captured the moment Babis left, telling Caroline's family that he had been asked to identify a 'new suspect' that police had arrested.  In fact, the suspect that police wanted Babis to identify was himself - which he is said to have done after a marathon eight-hour interrogation which ended with him admitting to her murder.  Police announced late Thursday that Babis had confessed to smothering Caroline during a fight at their home in the early hours of May 11 after she threatened to leave him along with their baby daughter.  Detectives say he then concocted an elaborate story about a break-in and spent the pre-dawn hours staging the raid, including drowning the family's seven-month-old husky puppy and hanging its body from the stair banister - a gruesome act which he would later blame on the 'burglars'.  Babis's story had also included lurid allegations that three men had tied up him and his wife, threatened their infant daughter with a gun, strangled Caroline to death, then fled with £10,000 in a case which shocked Greece.  But detectives say his story fell apart when data collected from a fitness tracker on Caroline's wrist showed her heart had stopped beating hours before the alleged break-in took place.  More tracking data from Babis's phone also showed him moving from the attic to the basement of the house and back again, despite claiming to have spent all night tied to the bed.  And data from a security camera at the home showed its memory card had been removed at 1.20am again, hours before Babis claimed the break-in happened.   It was this evidence that prompted Greek police to drag the father away from his wife's memorial service, where he had been continuing to play the part of the grieving widower.  He was taken by boat to a neighbouring island before being loaded into a helicopter and flown back to Athens and it was during this journey that he seemed to grasp the truth of what police were up to, Protothema reports.  After arriving at police headquarters, Babis was taken to an interrogation room and seemed to understand that he was being questioned as a suspect rather than a witness, a senior officer said.  After a short opening exchange he is said to have snapped and told investigators: 'I killed her. I will tell you everything in detail.'

The senior officer said the confession came before cops had even presented Babis with the new evidence.  'He started talking because he realized we knew everything,' the officer said.

'It was as if he wanted to get it out of him to calm down. Then he bowed his head and stopped talking.'

The officer said Babis recounted the story of his relationship with Caroline, from their first meeting while he was on holiday in Alonissos to falling in love and then their marriage in 2018.  But he said their marriage had devolved into daily arguments driven by his fear that she was planning to leave him, which culminated in her ordering him out of the house and asking for a divorce on the night in question.  Babis is said to have told officers that he threw her down on the bed and pressed her face into a pillow until she passed out, before realising he had killed her.  He then drowned the family dog in an area outside the home and removed the CCTV memory card which he snapped and flushed down the toilet.  After his confession was over, police left Babis in the company of two psychologists and then announced his guilt to the world in a statement at 9.36pm local time on Thursday evening.  Babis said in his statement: 'That night we were fighting early. At one point she threw the child in the crib and told me to leave the house.  She pushed me and punched me. I lost my temper, I suffocated her with the pillow. Τhen I made up the robbery.'

However, police told Greek media that Babis had removed the CCTV's camera's memory card hours before the attack took place - suggesting them murder was pre-meditated and not done in the heat of the moment.  Officers told Protothema that the camera captured its last images shortly after midnight, as Babis sat on the sofa downstairs cradling his daughter and arguing over text with Caroline, who was upstairs.  They say the camera's memory card was removed at 1.20am while the argument was still ongoing, and which continued for another two hours and 40 minutes.  Then, at precisely 4.01am, Caroline fitness tracker captured an intense burst of heart activity, which is when they believe the couple came to blows.  The activity continued for another 10 minutes, until Caroline's heart stopped beating around 4.11 am.   Babis is now being held in custody in Athens and is expected to be hauled before a magistrate today when he will be formally charged with premeditated murder, animal abuse, and misleading investigators.  The confession comes five weeks after Babis led mourners at Ms Crouch's funeral and read a eulogy while standing over her grave.  'Our loved ones are the most important people to us all,' he said at the time wiping away tears while holding their baby daughter in his arms.  You should always look after your loved ones and enjoy your time together.'

On social media, the young couple appeared to enjoy a blessed life 20-year-old Caroline posting snaps of the couple with their daughter, or else showing off their idyllic-seeming life in Greece as she wandered on sunny beaches in bikinis.  The pair had met while Babis was on holiday to the Greek island of Alonissos where Caroline, who was born in the UK, had lived with her parents since the age of eight.  They were married in 2018, and she gave birth to their first child a daughter in June last year.  But a friend said last night that the idyllic images were a mirage in fact, Babis was a jealous and controlling husband and Caroline was deeply unhappy.  She could not have the time she wanted with her friends and she was constantly expressing her complaints about his behavior,' a source told Greek news site Ethnos. 

It was a fact that police had also uncovered during their investigation, after speaking with a psychologist who was treating both Babis and Caroline in separate sessions.  At the time, it was reported that Caroline was suffering from post-natal depression. Officers did not say what Babis was being treated for.   Texts found by police on the coupe's phones also reinforced suspicions of a less-than happy marriage, with police saying messages exchanged in English showed that one had called the other 'stupid.'  On the night of the murder, Caroline had allegedly messaged a friend saying that she was leaving Babis.  Phone data also showed that Caroline had attempted to book herself into a hotel on the night she died, detectives said.   Police also revealed on Thursday that officers had 'immediately' suspected Babis of committing the murder, after noticing his 'cold' demeanor when they arrived at the crime scene on the morning of May 11.  One officer even told how he took Babis's daughter away from him and handed the girl to her grandmother out of fear that he might harm the girl, Protothema reports.  But detectives agreed to pursue the burglary theory while keeping their suspicions about Babis under wraps to avoid 'spooking' him.  That included allowing him to attend Wednesday's memorial service with Caroline's family.  Hariklia Theodorou, a cafe owner who employed Babis before he changed careers to become a pilot, was at the service and recalled how he was weeping and looking at pictures of Caroline before the police arrived.  'I remember the look on his face, he was puzzled. He did not expect it,' she told Greek media.  'Hey guys, let me go to my wife's grave' he said, but they told him 'No, Babi, you have to follow us now, aman has been arrested who fits the characteristics of Caroline 's killer and we have to go there to identify him.' Babis did not object and followed them.'

His confession ends a month-long investigation into what authorities billed 'a near-perfect murder' for the lack of evidence the killer left behind.   Anagnostopoulos, who trained as a helicopter pilot in Liverpool, had married Miss Crouch in May 2018 after they met while he was on holiday to Alonissos.  Miss Crouch, a student at the University of Piraeus, had a British passport. She moved to Alonissos with her mother Susan Dela Cuesta and father David Crouch, 78, when she was eight.  Three days after her death, every shop, bar and restaurant on the island of Alonissos closed as its 2,000 residents laid to rest the British woman they had adopted as their own in a hilltop cemetery overlooking the Aegean.  Earlier, her killer had brazenly addressed the mourners from the altar of the island's Greek orthodox church.  Wiping away a crocodile tear, he told them: 'I was very lucky that I knew her and she loved me. I was very lucky for all the moments we had together.  One thing that makes me even more sad than her death is the fact that our daughter will grow up without remembering her beautiful mother, who was the joy of life, though our daughter will always be with me and with all of us.'

As the wife he'd killed was buried, Anagnostopoulos still clutching their infant daughter to his chest hugged Miss Crouch's distraught mother.  Anagnostopoulos spent 37 days expertly playing the part of the grieving widower, providing the police with a detailed account of the robbery and even descriptions of the intruders.  He claimed that three men had broken into the house through a downstairs window, disabling security cameras before strangling the family dog on their way upstairs to the couple's bedroom where they found them asleep.  Babis claimed he was blindfolded and gagged, then tied to a bedpost with his back towards Caroline, who was also restrained.  He said the men had somehow known the couple were keeping £10,000 in cash at the house, hidden inside a Monopoly box, which they had planned to use for building works on a new plot of land they had bought.  Babis said he quickly gave up the location of the money to avoid an altercation, but the men were not satisfied and began demanding more valuables.  Through a gap in his blindfold he claimed to have seen the men who he said spoke Greek to him but a foreign language among themselves point a gun at his baby daughter's head while making their threats.  That had caused Caroline to scream, he said, after which the burglars bundled her to the bed and suffocated her before fleeing the property and leaving him tied up.  He claimed to have spent hours in that position, before managing to free himself just enough to crawl to a phone and dial a neighbour's number with his nose.  The neighbour then summoned police, who arrived to find the grisly scene.  Police had initially pursued the burglary narrative, and even arrested a suspect a Georgian with a history of violent burglaries who tried to leave the country on a fake passport but failed to link him to the crime.  DNA evidence collected from underneath Caroline's fingernails as she fought her attacker has also proved to be inconclusive.  But the investigation now appears to have been a ruse, concocted so that Babis would remain calm and stay in Greece while they pursued him as the real suspect.  During that time, Babis had given several interviews to the media while allegedly playing the grieving husband telling reporters 'imagine how I feel' when questioned about the tragedy.  He was also frequently pictured with Caroline's parents, even hugging her mother at the funeral which took place last month.  Babis had also sat down for two lengthy interview session with police, sticking to his story about the break-in both times.  Suspicions around him only crept into public view a few weeks ago, when it emerged the police had interviewed the couple's therapist.  At the time, detectives said they had uncovered 'vital evidence' about Babis and Caroline's relationship that they believed would help solve the case.  Babis is expected to be formally charged with murder on Friday. It is unclear whether he will enter a plea at the same time.

Police 'suspected Babis from the moment they saw him and dubbed him the 'Greek Oscar Pistorius''

Police who were first on the scene of the 'break in' had suspected Babis was the real culprit from the moment they laid eyes on him, the chief of police has told Greek media.  George Kalliakmanis, president of police in Attica, said officers had compared Babis to a 'Greek Oscar Pistorius' the South African athlete convicted of shooting dead girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp at their home in 2013, despite proclaiming his innocence.  He told Greek news site Protothema that detectives had immediately noticed the 'coldness' of Babis, adding that one officer had even taken his baby daughter away from him at the scene to 'protect' the girl.  Upon investigating the house, Mr Kalliakmanis said officers quickly uncovered signs the burglary had been staged saying that very few of the cupboards and wardrobes had been disturbed.  Typically, burglars will rip open every potential hiding place in search of valuables, Mr Kalliakmanis said.  But in this house, they appeared only to have searched in the places that Babis said valuables had been stored.  He added that officers had concealed their initial suspicions from Babis and pursued his burglary narrative to keep him calm, all the while believing the true suspect was much closer to home.

Babis 'based his fake break-in on real-life horrors suffered by one of his flight instructors'

It is a lurid and detailed tale: Three men speaking a foreign language break into a family home in the early hours, demand cash, threaten a baby with a gun, then strangle the wife and flee with £10,000.  This was the story concocted by Babis Anagnostopoulos, one which he delivered to detectives as they arrived at the home where Caroline Corouch lay dead on the morning of May 11.  Police now say the story was a fabrication - the elaborate break-in stage by Babis to hide his guilt. But how did he invent such a story?

According to one of Babis's former flight instructor, the helicopter pilot borrowed almost all the details from real-life horrors that he suffered two years prior.  The man, who spoke to Greek TV station ANT1 anonymously, said that he and his wife had also been attacked and tied up at their family home by a gang of robbers who demanded cash.  He said Babis's description of the gang leader being shorter than the other attackers matched his own experience, as did the claim of having seen the men after a blindfold slipped.  'The only difference was that we were attacked with clubs while Babis said he was attacked with pistols,' the man said.

The instructor said Babis would have heard the story from others at the airport, because he and his wife appealed for blood donations afterwards spreading the news among the staff.   He said that he had even gone to police to recount details of his raid after hearing Babis's story, believing the same men may have been to blame.  But following Babis's confession, he now suspects the 33-year-old used his story as the basis for his fabrication.

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https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9512049/Man-26-court-charged-murdering-married-father-two-M-S-car-park.html

Pictured: Man, 26, who is charged with murdering married father-of-two, 49, after he was 'run over' by BMW in M&S car park

    Married father-of-two Matthew Tester, 49, died after he was hit by a vehicle in Walton-upon-Thames, Surrey
    Shaan Mir, 26, has been charged with murder and attempted murder following the incident last Thursday
    A second man in his 40s, who was also hit by the car, was airlifted to hospital and suffered serious injuries

By Amie Gordon and Paul Thompson For Mail Online

Published: 11:10, 26 April 2021 | Updated: 19:01, 26 April 2021

This is the first picture of the man charged with murdering a married father-of-two who died after being 'run over' by a BMW in an M&S car park.  Shaan Mir appeared at Guildford Magistrates' Court this morning where he was charged with the murder of 49-year-old Matthew Tester, who was allegedly run over and killed in Walton-upon-Thames, Surrey, last Thursday.   The 26-year-old is also charged with the attempted murder of another unnamed man who was also hit by the car. The alleged victim, who is in his 40s, was airlifted to hospital with serious injuries.  Scaffolding boss Mr Tester, known to his friends as Tik, died at the scene. The 49-year-old's bereft family described him as a 'much loved son, husband, father, brother, uncle and friend to so many'.

His teenage daughter added: 'Dad taught me how to live. Our favourite thing was just to laugh, because even in our darkest time we did it together.'

Mir, a former company director, was remanded in custody and told a trial date has been set for November after he made a brief appearance at Guildford Crown Court today.  The 26-year-old, who lives with his mother in Weybridge, Surrey, did not enter a plea and details of the case were not disclosed to the court by the prosecutor.    This is the first picture of the man charged with murdering a married father-of-two who died after being 'run over' by a BMW in an M&S car park.  Shaan Mir appeared at Guildford Magistrates' Court this morning where he was charged with the murder of 49-year-old Matthew Tester, who was allegedly run over and killed in Walton-upon-Thames, Surrey, last Thursday.   Mir, dressed in a grey tracksuit top and bottom, was flanked by a security guard during his appearance and told he will next appear in court in July. If he goes on trial a date has been set for November.  Police have appealed for witnesses who saw a white BMW 1 series car leaving the M&S car park after the incident.  Police were called at 2.15pm on April 22 after a vehicle ran into two men. Emergency services rushed to the supermarket loading bay, but despite efforts to save Mr Tester he was declared dead at the scene.  Another man had to be airlifted to hospital with serious injuries but he is expected to recover.  Police said the white BMW was later found unoccupied about four miles away from the scene in Addlestone, Surrey.  Mr Tester's brother, who asked not to be named, said: 'Those who knew him will talk of his humour, generosity, willingness to help and his cheeky grin.  This tragedy has absolutely rocked the family who have been devastated by Tik's death. The hurt and sadness we've felt over the past few days simply cannot be fully quantified… and something no one should ever experience.   The consequences and ripples of Tik's death will have a lasting effect on so many lives. No mother should expect to outlive their son.  Over the past few days, the family have been inundated with condolences, love and such warmth and well wishes from friends across the country a testament to the love and affection people have for Tik and his family.  This has been of a great comfort. Tik is a figure widely known and loved within the Scootering community, which have all been rocked by the news of their friend's tragic death.  This affection has so far raised over £11,000 from nearly 500 donations from the scooterists worldwide in a GoFundMe, and £22,000 from the various Just Giving pages set up to help the family.'

Detective Chief Inspector David Springett, who is leading the investigation, said: 'This is an extremely difficult time for Tik's family and I would ask that their privacy is respected to allow them to grieve in peace.'

Shocked neighbours described Mr Tester as a family man devoted to his two teenage daughters, Maddy and Pippa.  His wife Kim is listed on Companies House as a director of his Sunbury Scaffold Services business.   The family lived in a £450,000 semi detached home in a quiet street about half a mile from Walton-on-Thames town centre, and the scene of the attack, for 18 years.  A sign pinned to a wooden gate at the side of the property gave a clue to his passion for scooters and read 'Lambretta Parking Only' a reference to the famous Italian scooter maker.  One neighbour said: 'He and his wife Kim were always so friendly. He was into some sort of martial arts and helped out with one of his daughter's football team.  No one can quite believe that he had been killed. I only saw him a couple of days ago and he was very chatty.'

Floral tributes in memory of the 49-year-old were left at the scene of the tragedy.  One note read: 'Tik, We are totally devastated. The scootering community and friends have lost a true mate, and we are all thinking of Kim and your daughters tonight.'

Other friends remembered Mr Tester as a 'brilliant guy' and an 'inspiration' as tributes flooded in from neighbours and members of a local 'chopper club' following the tragedy, which struck just days before his 50th birthday.

One wrote: 'It is an absolute shock, great person, thoughts go out to his wife and daughters.'

Another added: 'No words can express how shocking and tragic this devastating event is.'

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https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9513035/Horrified-doctor-body-grossly-millionaire-patient-59-doughnut.html

Horrified doctor found body of her 'grossly thin' millionaire patient, 59, next to a doughnut in unusually tidy room at his £1.8m farmhouse, murder trial hears

    Lynda Rickard, 60, and husband Wayne, 64, accused of murder and fraud 
    Dr Hilary Edwards found James Anthony Sootheran weighing just nine stone
    Mr Sootheran was kept in 'appalling conditions surrounded by mouse droppings'

By Isabella Nikolic For Mailonline

Published: 16:53, 26 April 2021 | Updated: 17:00, 26 April 2021

A doctor was left horrified after finding the body of her 'grossly thin' millionaire patient next to a doughnut in an unusually tidy room at his £1.8million farmhouse, a murder trial has heard.   Lynda Rickard, 60, and her husband Wayne, 64, isolated their friend James 'Anthony' Sootheran in his remote home and starved him to death in order to inherit a slice of his wealthy estate in South Newington, Oxfordshire, a prosecutor alleged today.  General practitioner Dr Hilary Edwards discovered the body of the frail father-of-one on March 18, 2014, after she decided to check on him at his home.  Retired auctioneer's clerk Mr Sootheran weighed 17 stone in his younger years but when he was found dead his severely malnourished body weighed a meagre nine stone.  Now retired, Dr Edwards had been a general practitioner at the Bloxham surgery near Banbury for 35 years, but had not seen Anthony for almost a year.  Describing her last visit before finding the 59-year-old's corpse, the doctor said today: 'I visited him at the farm as a routine check-up. I made note of his appalling living conditions.  The room was filthy, there were beard and nail trimmings on the floor, evidence of vermin, dirty bed linen.  Anthony was dishevelled and wearing dirty clothing. I encouraged him to eat and drink and get some fresh air, I was worried about his lack of muscle mass and poor diet.'

The court heard that before finding his body in March 2014, Lynda Rickard had called the doctors' surgery expressing concerns about Anthony and his eating habits.  Dr Edwards told the jury: 'I got a message to call Lynda Rickard about Anthony. As far as I can recall she had been worried about his eating over a previous couple of weeks. I prescribed him high calorie drinks to try to get some calories into him. She seemed happy but there was no particular urgency. I said I would be there within the next couple of days.  I had not seen him for the best part of 12 months, he had been dealing with my colleague. I do not know why I visited that day, possibly because I had time.'

Prosecutor Oliver Saxby QC claimed it was intuition that led Dr Edwards to check on Anthony at High Havens Farm but she was greeted with locked gates.  The doctor waited for live-in carer Lynda to return who told the GP she had not seen Anthony since the previous morning.  'When I got there, there was nothing out of the ordinary at the time. Lynda told me she had not seen Anthony since the previous morning as she had been clipping the horses.  Lynda knocked very loudly and called out ''Anthony, Anthony the doctor is here to see you'' it was unusual and it surprised me.  When the door opened, the first thing that struck me was that the room was tidy, that was really unusual. There were some clean clothes which also struck me as odd. The last time I went there the floor was covered.  My eyes then went down to the floor where I saw Anthony. He was clearly dead. He was stone cold, I think I touched his head and checked for his pulse, he was cold and stiff.  In the past when I had visited, there had been mouse droppings in his bedroom and I remember thinking I hope there was no mouse under that covering on his body.  I had not seen him for almost a year and he was grossly thinner. My concern in June 2013 was loss of muscle mass and looking thinner, he was grossly thinner on this occasion.  I told Lynda Rickard that he was clearly dead and we needed to remove ourselves from the room. She said ''oh Anthony'' fairly loudly,' the doctor told the jury at Reading Crown Court today.

After finding the body, the doctor explained she was 'surprised and shocked' before the pair waited in the High Havens Farm kitchen for the police to arrive.  The jury heard from Police Community Support Officer Thomas Bailey who attended the scene on March 18, 2014, and vividly recalled the room being freezing cold.  He said: 'I remember it being really cold in that room, there was a bucket of urine and the room smelled like urine.   I can't remember if there was a crack in the window or the windows were open but I can remember even now that it felt physically cold in that room.'

In addition to murder, Lynda Rickard, of Banbury, also denied gross negligence manslaughter; fraud; and two counts of perverting the course of justice.  Wayne Rickard was additionally charged with causing or allowing the death of a vulnerable adult after Anthony was discovered deceased in his bedroom; fraud; and perverting the course of justice.  Michael Dunkley, 48 years of Bloxham, near Banbury, stood charged with fraud in relation to the forged will of Mr Sootheran alongside 39-year-old Denise Neal, of Lower Tysoe, Warwickshire.  Shanda Robinson, aged 50 years, of Sage Road, Banbury denied fraud and conspiracy to pervert the course of justice.  The hearing continues.

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https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/queen-comforted-palace-inundated-letters-23810000?utm_source=mirror_newsletter&utm_campaign=royal_family_newsletter2&utm_medium=email&pure360.trackingid=1d98e5a4-56c1-4dc0-99ba-a0c256dd40d1

Queen comforted as palace inundated with letters of support in wake of Oprah interview

Sources say sacks full of letters, cards and gifts are delivered to Windsor Castle every day. The monarch is reportedly pleased to receive messages of support and 'kindness'

By Chiara Fiorillo

13:11, 28 MAR 2021Updated11:10, 29 MAR 2021

The Queen is said to be comforted by the public's support in the wake of Harry and Meghan's interview with Oprah Winfrey.  Sources say sacks full of letters, cards and gifts are delivered to Windsor Castle every day.  The monarch is reportedly pleased to receive messages of support after Harry and Meghan accused an unnamed member of the Royal Family of racism during their interview with Oprah.  Dame Mary Morrison, the Queen's lady-in-waiting, is said to reply to every letter, the Mail on Sunday reports.  Some of the responses are said to be "personal", with Dame Mary thanking supporters and adding the Queen appreciates their "kindness" following the interview.  A source told the Mail on Sunday: "We have seen a spike in correspondence after the interview in the same way that it might spike after any other event."

During their interview with Oprah Winfrey, Prince Harry and his wife Meghan Markle said a member of the Royal Family made a comment about how dark Archie's skin would be before he was born.  Meghan refused to say who the conversations had been with, saying it would be "very damaging to them", but said it happened numerous times.  She said: "In those months when I was pregnant, we had in tandem the conversations of him not being given security or a title, and also concerns about how dark his skin might be when he’s born.  They didn't want him to be a prince or princess, not knowing what the gender would be, which would be different from protocol and that he wasn't going to receive security."

When he joined the interview later, Harry said he would never reveal details of the conversations.  After their chat with the TV host, the Duke of Sussex told Oprah that it was not The Queen or Prince Philip who made the racist comment.  Speaking on CBS after the interview, Oprah said: "He did not share the identity with me but he wanted to make sure I knew, and if I had an opportunity to share it, that it was not his grandmother or grandfather that were part of those conversations.  He did not tell me who was a part of those conversations."

When approached by journalists at the end of a visit to a school, Prince William denied racism inside the Royal Family.  Sky News reporter Inzamam Rashid asked if the Royal Family was a racist family, to which William replied: “We’re very much not a racist family.” 

The day after the bombshell Oprah interview aired in the UK on March 8, the Palace issued a statement saying: “The whole family is saddened to learn the full extent of how challenging the last few years have been for Harry and Meghan.  The issues raised, particularly that of race, are concerning. While some recollections may vary, they are taken very seriously and will be addressed by the family privately.  Harry, Meghan and Archie will always be much-loved family members.”

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https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9392953/William-Kate-visit-vaccination-centre-Westminster-Abbey.html

William lights a candle and Kate lays daffodils to remember Britain's Covid victims on visit to Westminster Abbey on first anniversary of lockdown to praise efforts of those behind jab drive success

    The royal couple praised the efforts of those driving Britain's world-leading Covid-19 jab scheme
    Visit coincided with national minute's silence to remember Covid-19 victims on anniversary of first lockdown
    William and Kate spoke to NHS staff running the centre at Westminster, where jabs are given in Poets' Corner

By Martin Robinson Chief Reporter and Paul Thompson for MailOnline

Published: 12:13, 23 March 2021 | Updated: 16:11, 23 March 2021

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge have today visited a vaccination centre at Westminster Abbey where they lit a candle and laid flowers to remember the 126,000 people who have died in Britain during the pandemic.  The royal couple praised the efforts of those driving the UK's world-leading Covid-19 jab scheme as Britain remembers the tens of thousands of people who have died during the pandemic.  William and Kate walked down the aisle in the cathedral they married in on April 29, 2011, with the country's most famous church now helping with the vaccination effort, vaccinating 2,000 people a week in Poets’ Corner.  They also took part in the minute's silence at the Shrine of St Edward the Confessor, where William lit a candle and Kate, wearing a Catherine Walker coat, Jimmy Choo shoes and a bag from Metier London, left a bunch of daffodils.  During the visit, The Duke and Duchess also heard from staff about their experiences of being involved in the largest vaccination programme in the nation’s history, and working in one of Britain's most revered buildings.  The couple also spoke with a number of people receiving their vaccine that day.  More than 22.8 million people have now had at least one jab in little over 100 days since the NHS vaccination programme began, whilst another 1.5million second doses have also been administered. On Sunday around 96,834 vaccinations an hour were were carried out, at an average of 27 jabs a second.  Property manager George Clarke was surprised to see the royal couple as he was queuing for his vaccination. The 26-year-old, who suffers from asthma and was prioritised for vaccination, told MailOnline: 'As I walked into Westminster Abbey I saw William and Kate chatting to some of the people who were there. They both looked very relaxed and were smiling. You could tell all those arriving for their vaccine were happy to see them.'   

The Queen today led Britain in remembering the victims of coronavirus as the country held a national minute's silence at midday to mark the anniversary of the first national lockdown.  Boris Johnson, who was almost killed by Covid-19 himself, offered his 'sincere condolences to those who have lost loved ones' while Prince Charles called on Britain to 'remember the lives tragically cut short'.  And Her Majesty said in a statement released at noon, as millions bowed their head: 'As we look forward to a brighter future together, today we pause to reflect on the grief and loss that continues to be felt by so many people and families, and pay tribute to the immeasurable service of those who have supported us all over the last year.'

MPs and peers in both Houses of Parliament and ministers in the devolved nations marked the solemn anniversary at midday, while NHS and social care workers also joined the pause for reflection.  Cathedrals in Blackburn, Winchester, Gloucester and York Minster also fell silent in honour of those who have died during the pandemic. The London Eye, Tate Britain, Blackpool Tower, the Scottish Parliament, Belfast City Hall and other buildings will be lit in yellow on Tuesday evening to mark the occasion. The public is also being urged to stand on their doorsteps at 8pm with a candle or light.  William's father Prince Charles today called on Britain to 'remember the lives tragically cut short' by Covid-19 ahead of a national vigil this lunchtime as Boris Johnson marked the first anniversary of the first national lockdown in 2020 by vowing to end them 'once and for all'.  The Prime Minister called a national minute's silence at midday to remember the 126,000 people who have died during the pandemic as around 10,000 families still grieve their loved-ones.  And tonight Britons are being encouraged to stand on their doorsteps at 8pm and light candles as a 'beacon of remembrance' for those who have lost their lives.  Prince Charles has lent his support to the day of national reflection being held on the anniversary of the first UK lockdown.  In a recorded message, the heir to the throne, who is a patron of end-of-life charity Marie Curie, said: 'We have all been inspired by the resourcefulness we have witnessed, humbled by the dedication shown by so many, and moved, beyond words, by the sacrifices we have seen.  Whatever our faith or philosophy may be, let us take a moment together to remember those who have been lost, to give thanks for their lives, and to acknowledge the inexpressible pain of parting. In their memory, let us resolve to work for a future inspired by our highest values, that have been displayed so clearly by the people of this country through this most challenging of times.'

And in a message released last night, the Prime Minister also urged people to 'also remember the great spirit shown by our nation over this past year', as millions of NHS staff and other critical workers worked tirelessly through the pandemic. While tens of millions of people have worked from home and home-schooled their children during the greatest crisis the country has faced since the Second World War.   Mr Johnson, who was almost killed by Covid-19 himself, added: 'We have all played our part, whether it's working on the front line as a nurse or carer, working on vaccine development and supply, helping to get that jab into arms, home-schooling your children, or just by staying at home to prevent the spread of the virus.  It's because of every person in this country that lives have been saved, our NHS was protected, and we have started on our cautious road to easing restrictions once and for all.'

The Cambridges' royal duties came as it was claimed William was left ‘reeling’ by his brother’s bombshell television interview, with friends insisting that claims he was ‘trapped’ were ‘way off the mark’.  The Duke of Cambridge was also said to be furious at Harry and Meghan’s ‘insulting and disrespectful’ treatment of the Queen and thinks they ‘blindsided’ her before quitting royal duties.  The Royal Family is still trying to pick up the pieces from the couple’s explosive interview with Oprah Winfrey, which was broadcast earlier this month.  The Duke and Duchess of Sussex made a series of damaging allegations including implications of racism with claims that a family member asked how dark their son Archie’s skin might be.  They also claimed that Meghan had suffered suicidal thoughts and had been given little support by the Palace.  It has now been reported that William was left ‘reeling’ in the immediate aftermath of the programme, with a source close to the duke telling the Sunday Times Magazine: ‘His head is all over the place on it.’

Harry’s claims that William and his father Prince Charles were ‘trapped’ in their royal roles were also said to be ‘way off the mark’, with a source insisting that William does not see it that way.  ‘He has a path set for him and he’s completely accepting of his role. He is very much his grandmother’s grandson in that respect of duty and service,’ they said.

The relationship between the two brothers, who were once so close, has been strained for some time now and appears to have only got worse following the interview.  But, according to the newspaper, it was William who initially tried to smooth things over, playing peacekeeper in the tense run-up to Harry and Meghan’s wedding in 2018.  They finally divided their households in March 2019 following a series of disagreements about Harry’s role but William was still said to be shocked and upset when his brother decided to moved to America a year later.   Harry and Meghan’s controversial departure, dubbed ‘Megxit’, saw them choose to step back from senior roles and become financially independent.  After the infamous ‘Sandringham summit’ when the Megxit deal was hammered out William and Harry went for a walk to clear the air. However they did not part shores as friends, it was reported.  William was said to have been particularly aggrieved by the couple’s surprise launch of their ‘Sussex Royal’ website before the summit last January.  Later, when the Queen decreed they could no longer use ‘royal’ in their future ventures, Meghan and Harry hit back with a bold statement saying they did not intend to use ‘Sussex Royal’ or ‘Royal’ even though there was ‘not any jurisdiction’ over its use overseas.  A senior royal source told the newspaper that both the content and the fact the statement is still online is ‘staggering’.  The source added: ‘That was it for William, he felt they’d blindsided the Queen in such an insulting and disrespectful way.’

The issue was said to still be on William’s mind at the Commonwealth Day service last year the Sussexes’ final engagement as working royals when tensions between the brothers were palpable.  Despite this, it has been reported that William still hopes to heal the rift. A friend of William’s said the relationship was still ‘raw’, adding: ‘He’s very upset by what’s happened, though absolutely intent that he and Harry’s relationship will heal in time.’

The comments come amid reports that the Queen is considering appointing a diversity tsar to modernise the Monarchy.  As part of a major drive, aides will speak to a range of businesses and individuals about how the Monarchy can improve representation, The Mail on Sunday reported yesterday.  A year ago today the PM addressed the nation at 8pm and told them to stay at home to protect the NHS and avoid the 'devastating impact of this invisible killer'.

Twelve months on, the nation will pause in remembrance at midday, with Brits encouraged to stand on their doorsteps at 8pm with phones, candles and torches to signify a 'beacon of remembrance'.  More than 250 organisations are supporting the day of reflection, including 82 leaders from religious groups and cross-party politicians, care organisations, charities, businesses, emergency services, public sector bodies and community groups.  Mr Johnson, who will observe the minute's silence privately, said: 'The last 12 months has taken a huge toll on us all, and I offer my sincere condolences to those who have lost loved ones.  Today, the anniversary of the first lockdown, is an opportunity to reflect on the past year one of the most difficult in our country's history.  We should also remember the great spirit shown by our nation over this past year. We have all played our part, whether it's working on the front line as a nurse or carer, working on vaccine development and supply, helping to get that jab into arms, home schooling your children, or just by staying at home to prevent the spread of the virus.  It's because of every person in this country that lives have been saved, our NHS was protected, and we have started on our cautious road to easing restrictions once and for all.'

From March 29, the Rule of Six will return for outdoor gatherings, with the Government changing advice from Stay at Home to Stay Local, and a public transport lifted.  Next month, should Covid-19 rates continue to fall, non-essential retail and hairdressers will reopen on April 12, along with restaurants and pubs to outdoor customers.  May 17 will see hotel, cinemas and play areas reopen, with the Rule of Six dropped out doors, along with the possibility of international travel bans being lifted.  June 21 could see all legal limits on social contacts go, along with all restrictions on large events, just in time for the summer.   According to the latest available data from the Office for National Statistics, there have been 618,676 deaths from all causes registered in England and Wales between March 21 2020 and the week ending March 5 2021.  The figures also show that, across the UK, 147,681 deaths have now occurred where Covid-19 was mentioned on the death certificate.  The Health Foundation calculates that those who died with Covid-19 have lost up to 10 years of life on average, with a total of up to 1.5 million potential years of life lost.  Lending his support to the national day of reflection, the Prince of Wales, who is a patron of Marie Curie, said: 'Whatever our faith or philosophy may be, let us take a moment together to remember those who have been lost, to give thanks for their lives, and to acknowledge the inexpressible pain of parting.  In their memory, let us resolve to work for a future inspired by our highest values, that have been displayed so clearly by the people of this country through this most challenging of times.'

Addressing the nation last March 23, Mr Johnson said: 'Without a huge national effort to halt the growth of this virus, there will come a moment when no health service in the world could possibly cope; because there won't be enough ventilators, enough intensive care beds, enough doctors and nurses.  And as we have seen elsewhere, in other countries that also have fantastic health care systems, that is the moment of real danger.  To put it simply, if too many people become seriously unwell at one time, the NHS will be unable to handle it meaning more people are likely to die, not just from Coronavirus but from other illnesses as well.  So it's vital to slow the spread of the disease because that is the way we reduce the number of people needing hospital treatment at any one time, so we can protect the NHS's ability to cope and save more lives.  And that's why we have been asking people to stay at home during this pandemic.  And though huge numbers are complying and I thank you all the time has now come for us all to do more.  From this evening I must give the British people a very simple instruction you must stay at home.  Because the critical thing we must do is stop the disease spreading between households. 

Ending his speech, Mr Johnson said: 'We will come through it stronger than ever. We will beat the coronavirus and we will beat it together.  And therefore I urge you at this moment of national emergency to stay at home, protect our NHS and save lives. Thank you.'

Since then the country has undergone varying levels of lockdown, most recently the country returned to strictest measures at the start of January, amid fears of variants and a second wave.  Britain's vaccine roll-out has offered a light at the end of the tunnel after a year that saw elderly people and carers forced to shield from loved ones to avoid the virus.   Nearly 28million people have received their first dose of a Covid vaccine to date.  Dr Susan Hopkins, Public Health England strategic response director for Covid-19, said: 'This virus has left no one untouched and it has been the most challenging time both personally and professionally that many of us have ever faced.  I want to say thank you today to all the public health professionals and key workers who have worked long and difficult hours to help keep the country safe.  The commitment you have shown is an inspiration to us all.'

Rachel Reeves,  Labour's shadow chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, added: 'Today we reflect on what has been a terrible year for our country and the huge sacrifices the British people have made.  Our thoughts in particular are with those families who have lost loved ones to this terrible virus and will still be grieving.  As we reflect on the past year, we owe it to those whose lives have been lost to learn the lessons from the pandemic and to build a stronger more secure future for our country.  A public inquiry into the pandemic will be key to this.'

To mark the anniversary, London's skyline will turn yellow with landmarks including the London Eye, Trafalgar Square and Wembley Stadium lighting up at nightfall.  Other notable buildings that will be illuminated include Cardiff Castle and Belfast City Hall, while churches and cathedrals will toll bells, light thousands of candles and offer prayers.  In Portsmouth, churches will deliver more than 50 boxes of chocolates and cards to local GP surgeries, care homes and schools to thank key workers for their pandemic efforts.  The Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby said: 'This day of reflection is an opportunity to pause and remember all that's happened over the past year, to mourn those who have died but also to give thanks for those who have looked after us and our communities.  It is a moment to pray together to our Father in Heaven to comfort us in our grief and to lead us into the hope of the risen Christ and the eternal life he promises.  As we reflect on the pandemic, may He strengthen our resolve to rebuild a kinder, fairer and more compassionate society, may He be with those who are struggling and may He guide us in honouring those we have lost over the past year.'

Nursing staff will also pause to say thank you to members of the public for their year of sacrifice, and remember the loss of friends, colleagues and patients.  Nursing leader Dame Donna Kinnair said: 'After a year of sacrifices and gestures, great and small, we are taking our turn to thank the public. In a time of loss and fear, they helped us to keep digging deeper.  We will take a day to remember and reflect as much about the future we want as the year we've had.' 

As Europe is hit with a new wave of coronavirus cases, it was revealed todat face £5,000 fines for going abroad on holiday from Monday.  The threat of penalties for leaving the UK without ‘reasonable excuse’ such as for work or family matters will remain in place until the end of June.  Yesterday it emerged that France is likely to be added by the end of the week to a ‘red list’ of countries requiring hotel quarantine.  Health officials are increasingly concerned by a surge in cases of the South African Covid variant across the Channel. A minister even suggested the whole of the continent could be put on the red list because of botched vaccine rollouts.  That might mean the need to quarantine after foreign trips would stay in place until at least August.  A ‘traffic light’ system is under consideration, allowing restriction-free travel to ‘green’ countries. However, sources stressed no decisions had been taken.  Transport Secretary Grant Shapps is leading a taskforce that will report by April 12 on how and when the ban on non-essential travel can be lifted. Under Boris Johnson’s official roadmap it can be no earlier than May 17.  Care minister Helen Whately yesterday repeated official warnings that booking a trip abroad would be ‘premature’.  But top scientists yesterday backed allowing foreign holidays this summer.  Carl Heneghan, a professor of evidence-based medicine at Oxford University, said: ‘We were allowing people to go on holiday last summer, without any testing programme, and now we have got the vaccination programme and the testing programme. Given that, you have to ask the question, “What will it take if that’s not sufficient?”’

Professor Robert Dingwall, who sits on the Government’s scientific advisory group Nervtag, added: ‘We should have been able to complete the two rounds of vaccinations for the over-50s and clinically vulnerable by the end of April, early May.  Add on a couple of weeks for these things to take effect and you wouldn’t really have much of a case for going beyond the end of May [for extending the travel ban].’

However, given the picture in Europe it appears increasingly likely that foreign holidays will be delayed until at least June 21, the same day the Government plans to remove all domestic restrictions.  The slow rollout of the vaccination programme in Europe means most countries popular with Britons are unlikely to be declared ‘green’ until late summer. This would make foreign trips impossible for most holidaymakers because of the ten days of quarantine.  Putting France on the red list will mean returning British nationals are forced to isolate in an approved hotel at their own expense.   Non-British residents will be banned from entering and direct flights will also cease. Exemptions would be made for hauliers to protect trade.  Health minister Lord Bethell of Romford yesterday told peers: ‘The possibility is that we will have to red-list all of our European neighbours. But that would be done with huge regret because we are a trading nation.’

Thirty-five countries are on the red list, including the whole of South America, southern Africa, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar. Portugal was on the list but was removed last week.  The ban on foreign holidays was implicit because leisure trips abroad were not one of the reasons allowed for leaving the house.  But, from Monday it will be officially placed in law at the same time as the ‘stay at home’ message is lifted.  The foreign travel ban does not apply to those going to the common travel area of the Channel Islands, Isle of Man and the Republic of Ireland.  Exemptions apply to those needing to travel for work, study, for legal obligations or to vote. Births, weddings and visiting a dying relative or close friend also qualify.

How will lockdown be eased in the UK until the end of June? 

Step One Part One: March 8

From March 8, all pupils and students will return to schools and colleges across England.  So-called wrap-around childcare will also be allowed to resume, paving the way for after and before school clubs to reopen.  People will be allowed to meet one other person outside for recreation, for example, to have a picnic or to meet for coffee.  Care home residents will be able to have one regular named visitor.  The Government's stay at home order will remain in place, with travel for non-essential purposes still banned.

Step One Part Two: March 29

From March 29, outdoor gatherings of up to six people or a larger group from up to two households will be allowed. These gatherings will be allowed to happen in private gardens.  Outdoor sports like tennis and basketball will be allowed to reopen and people will also be able to take part in formally organised outdoor sports.  It is at this point that the Government's stay at home guidance will end, to be replaced by ministers encouraging people to 'stay local'.  However, the Government is expected not to define what constitutes local, instead choosing to rely on people using their common sense to decide on journeys.  People will still be told to work from home wherever possible while international travel will still be banned unless it is for essential purposes.

Step Two: April 12

Nom-essential retail will be allowed to reopen as well as personal care premises like hairdressers, barbers and nail salons.  Public buildings like libraries, museums and art galleries will be allowed to welcome back customers.  Meanwhile, hospitality venues and outdoor attractions like theme parks will be given the green light to reopen in some form.  However, there will still be rules on household mixing: Essentially any activity which involves being indoors will be restricted to members of the same household.  Gyms and swimming pools will also reopen from April 12 but only on the basis that people go on their own or with their own household.  Pubs and restaurants will be able to reopen but at this point they will only be able to have customers outdoors.  The Government will not be bringing back the old requirement for people to order a substantial meal with alcohol while the old 10pm curfew will be ditched.  All customers at hospitality venues will also have to be seated when they order food or drink, with ordering at the bar prohibited.  Campsites and holiday lets where indoor facilities are not shared with other households can also reopen but trips must be restricted a single household.  Funerals will be allowed to continue with up to 30 people, while the rules on wedding receptions will be eased to allow the number of guests to increase from six to 15.

Step Three: May 17

The two household and rule of six requirements for outdoor gatherings will be ditched but gatherings of more than 30 people in places like parks will still be banned.

Crucially, mixing indoors will be allowed again. The rule of six or a larger group from up to two households will be allowed to meet.   However, this will be kept under review by ministers to see if rules could be relaxed still further.  This is also the point at which pubs and restaurants and other hospitality venues will be able to open indoors, with the rule of six and two household limit in place. But groups meeting outdoors at pubs will be allowed to be bigger.  Entertainment venues like cinemas and children's play areas will be able to reopen, as will hotels and B&Bs. Indoor adult sports groups and exercise classes can also reopen.

Changes will also be made to sporting and performance events in indoor venues with a capacity of 1,000 people or half full

Lockdown a year on: Key dates in one of the most painful years in British history

- March 23: Prime Minister Boris Johnson announces the first UK lockdown, telling the public they will only be allowed to leave their homes for limited reasons, including food shopping, exercise once per day, medical need and travelling for work when absolutely necessary.  All shops selling non-essential goods are told to close, gatherings of more than two people in public are banned, events including weddings but excluding funerals are cancelled.

- March 24: Mr Hancock reveals that a new Nightingale hospital - with a capacity of 4,000 - is being prepared at the ExCeL Centre in London.

- March 25: The Prince of Wales tests positive for coronavirus but is displaying only 'mild symptoms', Clarence House says.

- March 27: Mr Johnson and Mr Hancock test positive for Covid-19, while England's chief medical officer Professor Chris Whitty says he has symptoms and is self-isolating.

- April 5: The Queen tells the nation if we 'remain united and resolute' in the face of the coronavirus outbreak, 'we will overcome it'.  Downing Street says the Prime Minister has been admitted to hospital for tests as a 'precautionary step' as his symptoms persist.

- April 6: Downing Street says Mr Johnson's condition has worsened and he is moved to St Thomas' Hospital's intensive care unit.

- April 7: Downing Street says the PM's condition remains 'stable' and he is in 'good spirits'. He is later moved from intensive care back to the ward.

- April 12: Mr Johnson is discharged from hospital and will continue his recovery at Chequers, Downing Street says.  The hospital death toll of people who have tested positive in the UK passes the 10,000 mark.

- April 30: In his first Downing Street press conference since being admitted to hospital, Mr Johnson says the country is now 'past the peak of this disease'.

- May 4: It is announced the first NHS Nightingale field hospital - at London's ExCeL centre will be placed on standby.

- May 5: The UK's declared death toll from coronavirus rises to more than 32,000, passing Italy's total and becoming the highest in Europe.

- May 10: Mr Johnson announces the first easing of England's lockdown, telling people they are allowed to sunbathe in parks and leave the house to exercise more than once a day.

- May 18: Everyone aged five and over is made eligible to be tested for coronavirus if they are showing symptoms, which are expanded to included a loss of taste or smell.

- May 22: Reports suggest Mr Johnson's senior aide Dominic Cummings allegedly broke the Government's lockdown rules when he was spotted at his parents' property in Durham, where he was recovering from coronavirus symptoms after travelling from his London home with his wife, who also fell ill, and son.

- May 23: A second eyewitness tells newspapers they saw Mr Cummings a week earlier in Barnard Castle, a popular tourist location 30 miles away from Durham, during the period he was believed to be self-isolating.

- May 25: Mr Cummings defends his actions at a press conference in the Downing Street rose garden, saying he believes he behaved 'reasonably' and does not regret his actions.

- May 28: NHS Test and Trace officially launches across England with the help of 25,000 contact tracers, while an accompanying app is still delayed by several weeks.  Mr Johnson announces groups of up to six are allowed to meet outside.

- May 30: Professor Jonathan Van-Tam says Britain is facing a 'very dangerous moment' with the easing of lockdown restrictions.

- June 1: Lockdown measures are eased, with schoolchildren in England in Reception, Year 1 and Year 6 returning to the classroom.

- June 16: The cheap steroid dexamethasone is hailed as a major breakthrough as a study suggests it is the first drug to reduce deaths from coronavirus.

- June 19: The UK's chief medical officers agree to downgrade the coronavirus alert level from four to three after a 'steady' and continuing decrease in cases in all four nations.

- July 3: A list of 73 countries and territories where English tourists can visit without self-isolating on their return is published, including popular short-haul destinations such as Spain, France and Italy.

- July 4: Pints are poured in pubs and couples finally say 'I do' as lockdown restrictions are eased across England.

- July 17: Mr Johnson eases the work-from-home guidance as he sets out plans for a 'significant return to normality' in England from as early as November.

- July 24: Face coverings become mandatory in shops across England, with £100 fines for people who flout the rules.

- July 30: People who test positive for coronavirus or display symptoms must now self-isolate for 10 days as Mr Hancock warns of a 'second wave starting to roll across Europe'.

- August 3: The Government's Eat Out To Help Out scheme launches, with restaurants, pubs and cafes offering half-price meals to diners during August.

- August 24: The Prime Minister issues a plea to parents to send their children back to the classroom when schools reopen.

- September 8: Mr Hancock warns of a possible second peak following a 'concerning' rise in the number of cases.  Social gatherings of more than six people will be illegal in England from September 14, ministers announce, as the Government seeks to curb the rise in coronavirus cases.

- September 17: Baroness Dido Harding denies that the Test and Trace system is failing but acknowledges that a surge in demand is significantly outstripping capacity.

- September 18: Mr Johnson warns that a second wave of coronavirus has arrived in the UK.  The R number representing the number of people an infected person will pass the virus to - is estimated to be between 1.1 and 1.4, meaning cases could rise very quickly.

- September 21: Chief scientific adviser Sir Patrick Vallance tells a televised briefing the UK could see 50,000 cases a day by mid-October and a daily death toll of 200 or more a month later unless urgent action is taken.

- September 22: The Prime Minister prepares to announce new restrictions including a 10pm curfew on pubs, bars and restaurants in England from September 24.  Cabinet Office Minister Michael Gove recommends that people now work from home if able to do so.

- September 24: A total of 6,634 new coronavirus cases are recorded, the highest single-day figure so far since the outbreak began.

- October 12: The Prime Minister launches a three-tier system of local alert levels for England, with the Liverpool City Region the only area to be placed in the Tier 3 very high category.

- October 31: Mr Johnson announces that people in England will be told to stay at home for four weeks as the country is placed under another national lockdown, with the closure of hospitality and non-essential shops.

- November 24: The UK Government and devolved administrations agree on plans allowing families to reunite over the festive period by forming 'Christmas bubbles'.

- December 2: England's national lockdown comes to an end and is replaced by a strengthened three-tier system.  Meanwhile, the UK becomes the first country in the world to approve the coronavirus vaccine from Pfizer and BioNTech.

- December 8: Grandmother Margaret Keenan, 90, becomes the first patient in the world to receive the Pfizer/BioNTech jab as the NHS launches its biggest ever vaccine campaign.

- December 14: Mr Hancock tells MPs a new strain of coronavirus has been identified in southern England, with the number of cases involving the new variant 'increasing rapidly'.  Tougher restrictions are imposed on London and parts of Essex and Hertfordshire following 'very sharp, exponential rises' in cases.

- December 19: The Prime Minister cancels Christmas for almost 18 million people across London and eastern and south-east England by moving them into a newly created Tier 4 for two weeks effectively returning to the lockdown rules of November after scientists warn of the rapid spread of the new variant VUI 202012/01.

- December 30: It is announced that an additional 20 million people in England will move to the tightest restrictions, making a total of 44 million in Tier 4, or 78% of the population.  Meanwhile, a Covid-19 vaccine from Oxford University and AstraZeneca is approved for use in the UK.

- January 4 2021: The Covid-19 alert level should be raised to five - the highest setting a joint recommendation from the UK's chief medical officers says.  Later that evening, in a televised address, Mr Johnson announces a third national lockdown for England which will see schools shut to most students and people urged to stay at home to prevent the NHS being overwhelmed by surging coronavirus infections.

- January 9 2021: The Queen and Duke of Edinburgh receive their Covid-19 vaccinations and take the unusual step of making a health matter public.

- January 19 2021: An estimated one in eight people in England had Covid-19 by December last year, according to antibody data from the Office for National Statistics' Covid-19 Infection Survey.

- January 26 2021: According to the Government's measure of the death toll, more than 100,000 people in the UK have now died within 28 days of testing positive for coronavirus since the pandemic began.

- February 2 2021: Captain Sir Tom Moore, who raised more than £32 million for the NHS by walking 100 laps of his garden before his 100th birthday during the first national lockdown in April, dies after testing positive for Covid-19.

- February 15 2021: Travellers arriving in the UK from countries on the travel ban 'red list' must now quarantine in a Government-approved hotel for 10 days.

- February 20 2021: The Prime Minister pledges that all adults will be offered a vaccine by July 31, while those aged 50 and over will be offered one by April 15.

- February 22 2021: Mr Johnson announces a road map out of lockdown, with a four-step plan to gradually ease England's restrictions by June 21.

- March 8 2021: All children in all year groups return to classrooms in England, with outdoor after-school sports and activities also allowed to restart.  People are also allowed to have socially distanced one-to-one meetings with others outdoors in a public space.

- March 17 2021: NHS leaders warn there will be a 'significant reduction' in vaccine supply for four weeks from March 29 due to a delay in deliveries from India and the need to retest a batch of 1.7 million doses. The Health Secretary says the vaccination programme remains 'on track' to meet the Government's targets.  Meanwhile, European Union chief Ursula von der Leyen threatens to block the export of vaccines to the UK amid an ongoing row over the supply of the Oxford/AstraZeneca jab.

- March 19 2021:The Prime Minister receives his first dose of the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine at St Thomas' Hospital in central London.

- March 20 2021: The Government announces that half of the UK's adult population - some 26,853,407 people aged 18 and over - have received their first dose of the Covid-19 vaccine, as of March 19.

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Charlotte Church's biological father Stephen Reed dies from coronavirus, aged 56 without ever reconnecting with his estranged daughter

*  Mr Reed was admitted to the University Hospital of Wales, Cardiff, with Covid-19 before Christmas, and it is understood he later died at his home
*  He walked out on wife Maria and two-year-old Charlotte to start a new life with hospital podiatrist Alison, who he married 33 years ago
*  In 2008, he made a heartfelt public plea begging Charlotte for a reconciliation, and even turned up at her home
*  Charlotte had previously declared she had no intention of getting reacquainted with her biological father or his immediate family and called them 'strangers'
*  The classical singer stayed loyal to her mother Maria and stepfather James, who had adopted her when she was three
*  Charlotte, who was dubbed 'Voice of an Angel', previously told how finding fame at the age of just 11 tore her family apart
*  Charlotte rose to fame when she performed Andrew Lloyd Webber's Pie Jesu over the telephone on This Morning in 1997
*  She went on to sell 10 million records worldwide and has an estimated wealth of £10 million, but has remained largely out of the limelight for the past few years

By Roxy Simons For Mailonline

Published: 22:36, 17 February 2021 | Updated: 08:37, 18 February 2021

Charlotte Church's biological father has died of coronavirus aged 56 without being able to reconnect with his estranged daughter, it was revealed on Wednesday.  Stephen Reed was desperate to make amends with the former Voice Of An Angel child star, 34, who he walked out on when she was just two.  Mr Reed was admitted to the University Hospital of Wales, Cardiff, with Covid before Christmas.  It is understood he later died at his home in Cowbridge, Vale of Glamorgan with his family at his side.  A post mortem examination was carried out for the Glamorgan Coroner but it is understood there will be no inquest because he died of natural causes.  It is believed Charlotte and her father did not make up prior to his death, and he did not meet her two children Ruby, 13, and Dexter, 12.  MailOnline has contacted Charlotte's representatives for comment.  In 2008, Mr Reed made a heartfelt public plea begging Charlotte for a reconciliation, and even turned up at her home.  Ten months after her daughter Ruby's birth, and as she was pregnant with her son Dexter, Mr Reed said: 'Please get in contact with me I still love you.  It upsets me very much that I've got a grandchild who I don't know and another on the way, but what can I do?  When I see photos of Ruby, I see a lot of myself in her. I'm a good dad. I think I would be a good grandparent. I don't see what the problem is.'

Charlotte had previously declared she had no intention of becoming reacquainted with her biological father or his immediate family.  In an interview at the time, she claimed: 'They are strangers to me. I don't know if they are moral.  Ignorance is bliss. I'm staying in my own ignorant bubble, right or wrong.'

Mr Reed walked out on wife Maria and then two-year-old Charlotte to start a new life with hospital podiatrist Alison, who he married 33 years ago.  The couple have two sons Luke, 32, and Alex, 28, and several grandchildren.  Mr Reed was a former computer engineer but became a successful beekeeper.  His business, the Wildflower Honey Company, is a regular at food festivals and agricultural shows in Wales and the West Country.  Charlotte lived just 12 miles away from her estranged father in the village of Dinas Powys where she runs a private school.  She was engaged to former Wales and British Lions rugby star Gavin Henson when her natural father tried to get in touch in 2008.  Charlotte stayed loyal to her mother Maria and stepfather James, who had adopted her when she was three.  The classical singer told of her fears of losing James after he was diagnosed with a rare terminal blood disorder, AL amyloidosis, in 2019.  At the time, she said of his illness: 'It's absolutely terrifying the idea of not having him around. I rely on him for so much, he's my buddy, my absolute best friend and has been for years.'

Charlotte married musician Johnny Powell in 2017 and the couple welcomed a baby girl together in August last year.  The musician previously told how finding fame at the age of just 11 tore her family apart.  Opening up about the traumatic time, Maria said: 'When Charlotte left home, it was very, very brutal and very sudden, she broke my heart, I ended up having a nervous breakdown.' 

Adding that she is still in therapy, Maria added: 'It's early days but I'm trying to do something about it now, I've always suffered with mental health issues, mine are quite complex.  We stayed in Cardiff which was really important, if I'd have moved her to London, I think that glitz lifestyle could have got the better of us, but we always went back to our roots.'

Charlotte rose to fame at the age of just 11 when she performed Andrew Lloyd Webber's Pie Jesu over the telephone on This Morning in 1997.  She went on to sell 10 million records worldwide and has an estimated wealth of £10 million, but has remained largely out of the limelight for the past few years.

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'I had to tell dad my brother had taken his own life I'll never forget his reaction'

PE teacher Adam Bardouleau, from West Sussex, has taken on a gruelling running challenge to mark what would have been his brother's 30th birthday to raise awareness of suicide and mental health

By Zoe Forsey  Lifestyle Editor

11:21, 11 FEB 2021Updated11:37, 11 FEB 2021

The last time Adam Bardouleau saw his big brother Matt, he was his normal happy self.  They were both at their family home in West Sussex, having a laugh and exchanging small talk before heading out to go about their days as normal.  But just a few hours later, Adam, 26, got a call that would change his life forever, and he would then have the devastating job of telling his dad that Matt had taken his own life.  Recalling the terrible day in August 2019, Adam tells The Mirror: "I saw him on the day he passed away and he was absolutely fine. There was never any indication of what he would do that day. Everything was normal.  He was a very happy person. The amount of messages we've had from his friends and people he worked with saying he was the life and soul of parties and always lightened the mood.  People were saying he would always make work bearable.  On the outside he was so happy."

Matt was working in retail at the time, but had just been offered a new job which was set to be the beginning of an exciting new career.  Police called Adam's family to say they had found Matt's car at Beachy Head, a popular walking spot near Eastbourne.  They didn't think much of it, assuming he had just gone for a run, but thought it odd that the police had called them.  Adam was about to head out to cricket training, but decided to call Matt's best friend and the two of them drove up to Beachy Head to find out what was going on.  On the drive they continued calling him, until on one of the attempts somebody answered saying they had found Matt's wallet, keys and phone.  When they arrived they started searching the area, and 45 minutes later the coast guard told them they had found Matt.  Adam drove to the hospital, but his dad called while he was on route meaning he had the heartbreaking job of giving him the news.  He said: "I had to tell dad what had happened.  His reaction is something I will never forget. All I do was hear him down the phone.  I remember the day after and for several weeks after, it was just numbness. There is nothing to liken it to.  It's an awful feeling I can't explain. Even if someone else has been through a similar experience , you can't relate because everyone goes through it so differently.  Some days are harder than others. Different things trigger different memories.  Walking past his bedroom is difficult, just having all those memories there.  Birthdays and Christmas are difficult, they're just not the same.  As a family it's been really difficult. We're a tight family anyway but it's brought us even closer.  It was a very traumatic time for his friends and family."

Adam is now determined to share Matt's story to raise awareness of suicide and mental health.  He said: "We're trying to make people aware it's okay to not be okay.  As a family, we didn't see that Matt was struggling. It was a complete shock.  It was difficult to take because he was this big brother figure. It can still come down to not wanting to show weakness. I think that's probably why he kept it under wraps."

To mark what would have been Matt's 30th birthday, Adam took on a gruelling running challenge as part of the Move For Mind fundraiser.  Matt loved exercise and the outdoors, and was a regular at the gym, which is why Adam decided on a fitness challenge.  He originally set himself the goal of running 100 miles in 30 days for the Move For Mind event, but half way through the challenge decided to set the bar even higher.  He said: "Matt loved being outdoors and being active, so this was quite fitting.  When I first started the challenge I thought 100 would be real challenge. When I was going into to the running I thought I can do this and I'm actually quite enjoying it.  I started with a 10K and loved it, so I just kept going."

He ran different distances every day, including two half marathons, battling the awful January weather.  Friends and family members joined him on most of his runs, but lockdown restrictions meant he had to turn down offers of support he could only exercise with one person at a time.  It has its struggles and the weather didn't help.  There were times I was really struggling physically and my legs had seen better days.  Where I've had so much support and so many donations, that's really spurred me on.  Knowing that it's going to be helping someone out there and raising awareness of mental health really kept me going."

He originally set himself a fundraising target of £200, thinking that people may not be able to donate due to it being in January and the pandemic.  But before he even put his trainers on on January 1, he had already raised £1,000, and his total is now over £6,000.  "It's incredible really. It showed how many people cared about the cause.  It's great seeing the money come in but the whole point of this was to raise awareness.  If what I've done helps one person, that's brilliant. I'd take that over the money."

And he's already seen the impact of his efforts, and has been contacted by several people who have shared their experiences.  He's also been able to pass on information to some people who have said they are struggling at the moment.  To sponsor Adam's incredible challenge, click here.

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Boy, 8, orphaned as mum, 35, dies of cancer just years after tragic death of dad

After being given just months to live with terminal cancer, 35-year-old Vicky Myers, from Thornaby, North Yorkshire, "hung on as much as she could" to make more memories with her son William

By Chris Kitching Senior News Reporter

09:57, 22 JAN 2021 Updated10:00, 22 JAN 2021

An eight-year-old boy has been left orphaned after his mum died of terminal cancer just years after he tragically lost his father.  Vicky Myers, 35, courageously battled the disease and did everything possible in her final months to make more memories with her son William, whose dad John died in 2015.  Leaving William without a parent was her "biggest fear" and, while undergoing gruelling treatment, she "hung on as much as she could" to have more time with him, including one last Christmas at home, said longtime friend Lorraine Mulgrew.  After beating triple-negative breast cancer and just days after her own father died, brave Vicky was given the devastating news in February last year that the disease had spread through her body and she had as little as three months to live.  The mum, from Thornaby, North Yorkshire, had survived with incurable cancer for almost a year when she lost her fight on January 11.  It came just over two weeks after one final Christmas with her son and her retired mother Janet, who is now caring for William with her husband (Vicky's stepdad) Keith.  Lorraine, 36, said: "She hung on as much as she could to do as much as she could for William.  That was her biggest fear, leaving William without a parent.  She’s the most courageous person I have ever met.  Everything that she went through, it was all for William."

Lorraine, who has set up a JustGiving page to support William, added: "He is struggling, as anybody would.  He just lost his mum and is facing life without his parents."

The boy's father, musician John Myers, was only 32 when he died tragically in 2015. John and Vicky met almost 15 years ago while he was performing in Thornaby.  Two years after his death, Vicky, who worked as a receptionist at a GP's surgery until her terminal diagnosis, discovered a lump in one of her breasts.  After gruelling rounds of treatment, scans didn't show any signs of cancer.  But she started having pains in October 2019 and collapsed in February 2020. She was told that she had terminal cancer after scans showed tumours in her liver and rib cage.  The diagnosis came just days after her dad Jeff, 66, died following long-term health problems.

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https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9082111/Jealous-husband-43-son-20-jailed-attack-love-rival.html

Father and son who launched savage hammer attack on estranged wife's new lover and left him seriously injured are jailed for four years each

    Craig Shortman, 43, and Dillon Gillott, 20, ambushed Neil Twist, 43, in Salford
    Savaged him while he was with Shortman's estranged wife and Gillott's mother
    Julie Gillott tried to intervene but could only watch as they battered Mr Twist
    Shortman and Gillott jnr, both of Little Hulton, Salford, admitted inflicting grievous bodily harm and were each jailed for four years

By Danyal Hussain For Mailonline

Published: 10:59, 23 December 2020 | Updated: 11:00, 23 December 2020

A jealous husband and his son have been jailed for four years after a savage 'Rambo' knife and hammer attack on his estranged wife's new lover.  Craig Shortman, 43, and Dillon Gillott, 20, caused Neil Twist's head to 'explode' with blood after the pair ambushed him as he walked down the street with Julie Gillott in Salford.  During the beating, Mr Twist, also 43, was stabbed by Shortman in the thigh and buttocks with a military-style hunting knife while Gillott struck the victim over the side of the head with the hammer.  Mrs Gillott, 43, tried to intervene but was unable to and blood poured from Mr Twist's head.   A member of the public had to patch up the wound with a tee-towel while they waited for an ambulance.  The victim was treated at hospital for a hematoma and had wounds on his face, leg and buttocks.  At Manchester Crown Court, Shortman and Gillott jnr, both of Little Hulton, Salford, admitted inflicting grievous bodily harm and were each jailed for four years.  Prosecutor Robert Elias said: 'Jealousy is often called the green-eyed monster. In this case the defendants are father and son, and the victim Neil Twist had started a relationship with Mr Shortman's ex-wife and Mr Gillott's mother several months before this attack.  Mr Shortman had not yet divorced from his now ex-wife and it is clear he was jealous of the new man in her life.  At around 4pm on 21 October 2019 the defendants got in their car armed with a knife and a lump hammer and came across the victim in Salford.  They saw him walking down the street with his partner and attacked him using these weapons. Mr Shortman had a knife described as military-style and Mr Gillott had a lump hammer, hitting the side of the victim's temple repeatedly in the same place.  At the same time Mr Shortman stabbed the victim in his left thigh and buttocks. His partner tried to intervene as the final hammer blow caused blood to explode from the victim's head. She phoned for an ambulance.  'A member of the public came along with a tee-towel to stop the blood and an air ambulance had to be called, but the victim was taken to Manchester Royal Infirmary by a normal ambulance.  The victim had a hematoma, blood had collected on the right side of his face and he had a 3cm laceration on his face, as well as wounds on his left buttock and thigh. The wounds were unpleasant, but the victim was lucky they were not substantially worse.  The defendants were both arrested at their home address the next day. As police came to the door Mr Gillott tried to escape through the window but was rugby tackled by the police. Mr Gillott replied 'no comment' at interview but Mr Shortman said his wife had made false accusations about him. He was trying to blame her but she was completely blameless.' '

In mitigation Mr Shortman's lawyer David Bentley said: 'He understands custody is not the way forward for him and has started to better himself.'

For Gillott, David Bentley said: 'Love can cause people to act in misguided ways.  There is an unfortunate background of domestic violence between the victim and the defendant's mother although no allegations have been made to the police. This explains why he took part in the attack on the victim.  He is starting to grow up. He is remorseful for this offence.'

Sentencing Judge Suzanne Goddard QC told the pair: 'You are father and son and it is a great tragedy that you appear in the dock together in relation to these serious allegations.  This wound was a serious injury and you were both lucky the victim did not sustain fatal injuries having been attacked with that sort of weapon. This was a particularly nasty incident in a public place in the middle of the afternoon.  There is little that can be said for either of you that would reduce the length of your sentences.'

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General Discussion / The Skeletons at the Lake
« on: December 10, 2020, 04:43:29 PM »
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2020/12/14/the-skeletons-at-the-lake?utm_source=pocket&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=pockethits

The Skeletons at the Lake

Genetic analysis of human remains found in the Himalayas has raised baffling questions about who these people were and why they were there.

By Douglas Preston
December 7, 2020

In the winter of 1942, on the shores of a lake high in the Himalayas, a forest ranger came across hundreds of bones and skulls, some with flesh still on them. When the snow and ice melted that summer, many more were visible through the clear water, lying on the bottom. The lake, a glacial tarn called Roopkund, was more than sixteen thousand feet above sea level, an arduous five-day trek from human habitation, in a mountain cirque surrounded by snowfields and battered by storms. In the midst of the Second World War, British officials in India initially worried that the dead might be the remains of Japanese soldiers attempting a secret invasion. The apparent age of the bones quickly dispelled that idea. But what had happened to all these people?

Why were they in the mountains, and when and how had they died?

In 1956, the Anthropological Survey of India, in Calcutta, sponsored several expeditions to Roopkund to investigate. A snowstorm forced the first expedition to turn back, but two months later another expedition made it and returned to Calcutta with remains for study. Carbon dating, still an unreliable innovation, indicated that the bones were between five hundred and eight hundred years old.  Indian scientists were intensely interested in the Roopkund mystery. The lake, some thought, was a place where holy men committed ritual suicide. Or maybe the dead were a detachment of soldiers from a thirteenth-century army sent by the Sultan of Delhi in an ill-fated attempt to invade Tibet, or a group of Tibet-bound traders who had lost their way. Perhaps this was hallowed ground, an open-air cemetery, or a place where victims of an epidemic were dumped to prevent contagion.  People in the villages below Roopkund had their own explanation, passed down in folk songs and stories. The villages are on the route of a pilgrimage to honor Nanda Devi, a manifestation of Parvati, a supreme goddess in Hinduism. The pilgrimage winds up through the foothills of the Trisul massif, where locals believe that the goddess lives with her husband, Shiva. It may be the longest and most dangerous pilgrimage in India, and a particularly perilous section the Jyumra Gali, or Path of Death runs along a ridge high above Roopkund. As the villagers tell it, long ago Nanda Devi left her home to visit a distant kingdom, where she was treated discourteously by the king and queen. Nanda Devi cursed the kingdom, unleashing drought and disaster, and infesting the milk and rice with maggots. In order to appease the goddess, the royal couple embarked on a pilgrimage. The king, who liked his entertainments, took along a bevy of dancing courtesans and musicians, in violation of the ascetic traditions of the pilgrimage. Nanda Devi was furious at the display of earthly pleasures, and she shoved the dancing girls down into the underworld. The pits into which they are said to have sunk are still visible high on a mountainside. Then, according to the legend, she sent down a blizzard of hail and a whirlwind, which swept all the pilgrims on the Path of Death into the lake. Their skeletons are a warning to those who would disrespect the goddess.  This story is retold in “Mountain Goddess,” a 1991 book by the American anthropologist William Sax. Now a professor at Heidelberg University, he stumbled upon a reference to the lake and the bodies as an undergraduate, in the nineteen-seventies, and was fascinated. He and a friend travelled to the hamlet of Wan, the settlement closest to Roopkund, where a local man agreed to guide them up the pilgrim trail to the lake. The trail climbs through deep forests, emerging above the tree line, at eleven and a half thousand feet, into meadows carpeted with wildflowers. To the north is a vast wall of Himalayan peaks, some of the highest in the world. From there, the route follows steep ridgelines and leads past an ancient stone shrine, festooned with bronze bells and tridents and containing a statue of the elephant deity Ganesha. Then, at fifteen thousand feet, it goes over a pass and up a series of switchbacks through scree to Roopkund. The lake, about a hundred and thirty feet across and ten feet deep, is an emerald jewel nestled in a bowl of rock and ice. (In Hindi, roop kund means “beautifully shaped lake.”) Almost as soon as Sax and his companions arrived, they were engulfed by a blizzard and stumbled around the bone-strewn cirque in whiteout conditions, calling for one another and nearly adding their own bodies to the charnel ground.  Exhausted and feverish, Sax barely made it back to Wan with his companions, and spent ten days recovering in his guide’s stone hut. Yet his passion for the place was undimmed. He went on to write a doctoral thesis about the local traditions surrounding Nanda Devi. In the late eighties, he went on the pilgrimage himself, the only Westerner to have done so at that time, after which he published “Mountain Goddess.” The book describes how the Himalayas, “associated for thousands of years in India’s literatures with famous pilgrimage places and powerful, ascetic renouncers,” became the setting for followers to show devotion to the goddess by “giving suffering” to their bodies.  In 2005, Sax was featured in a National Geographic documentary about the lake. The Indian media company that made the film assembled a team of archeologists, anthropologists, geneticists, and technicians from research laboratories in India and the U.K. to collect and study the bones. In the decades since Sax first visited, the lake had become a popular destination in the trekking community and the site was being ruined. Bones had been stolen; others had been rearranged in fanciful patterns or piled in cairns. Almost none of the skeletons were intact, and it was impossible to tell which bones belonged together or where they had originally lain. Nature had added to the confusion, churning and fracturing the bones with rock slides and avalanches. But a recent landslide had exposed a cache of fresh bones and artifacts. Under a slab of rock, the team found the remains of a woman, bent double. The body was intact and still had skin and flesh. The scientists removed tissue samples for testing, shot video, and collected bones and artifacts. The team estimated that the area contained the remains of between three hundred and seven hundred people.  The scientific analysis swiftly discounted most of the prevailing theories. These were not the remains of a lost army: the bones were from men, women, and children. Aside from a single iron spearhead, no weapons were found, and there was no trace of horses. The bones showed no evidence of battle, ritual suicide, murder, or epidemic disease. Nor was Roopkund a cemetery: most of the individuals were healthy and between eighteen and thirty-five years old. Meanwhile, the team’s geographic analysis laid to rest the idea of traders lost in the mountains, establishing that no trade route between India and Tibet had ever existed in the area. Although the Tibetan border is only thirty-five miles north of Roopkund, the mountains form an impassable barrier. Besides, no trade goods or beasts of burden were found with the bodies. Artifacts retrieved included dozens of leather slippers, pieces of parasols made of bamboo and birch bark, and bangles made of seashells and glass. Devotees of Nanda Devi carry parasols and wear bangles on the pilgrimage. The dead, it appeared, were most likely pilgrims.  DNA analysis showed that all the victims appeared to have a genetic makeup typical of South Asian origin. Bone and tissue samples were sent to Oxford University for carbon dating. The new dates, far more accurate than the 1956 ones, formed a tight cluster in the ninth century. Tom Higham, who performed the analysis, concluded that the victims had perished in a single event and had “died instantaneously within hours of one another.”

Meanwhile, a team of bioarcheologists and paleopathologists noted the presence of two distinct groups: there were “rugged, tall” people with long heads and also some “medium height, lightly built, round headed” people, who displayed a curious shallow groove across the vault of the skull. The scientists concluded that the dead represented two populations: a group of tall Brahmans from the plains of India and a company of shorter, local porters, whose skulls were marked by years of carrying heavy loads with a tumpline looped over their heads.  The investigation also revealed that three or possibly four skulls had compression fractures on the crown that had probably occurred at the time of death. “It is not a weapon injury,” the researchers noted, but came “from a blow from a blunt and round heavy object.”

This stretch of the Himalayas is notorious for hailstorms, which destroy crops and damage property. The team concluded that, around the year 800 A.D., a group of pilgrims were caught in a storm on the exposed ridge above Roopkund and were pummelled to death by giant hailstones. Over the years, landslides and avalanches had rolled the bodies down the steep slope into the lake and the surrounding area. Not only did the mystery of Roopkund appear to be solved; it also seemed that the local tales of Nanda Devi’s wrath had originated in an actual event.  Last year, however, Nature Communications published the baffling results of a new study conducted by sixteen research institutions across three continents. Genetic analysis and new carbon dating revealed that a significant proportion of the Roopkund remains belonged to people from somewhere in the eastern Mediterranean, most likely near Crete, and that they had perished at the lake only a couple of centuries ago.  India is an ideal country for studying human genetics, ancient and modern. There are fewer cultural barriers to handling human biological materials than in many parts of the world, and Indian scientists have eagerly pursued research into the peopling of the subcontinent. Geneticists have sampled the DNA of hundreds of living populations, making India one of the most genetically mapped countries in the world. In 2008, David Reich, a geneticist at Harvard, made the first of many trips to the country, and visited a leading life-science research institution, the Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology, in Hyderabad. While there, he discussed someday collaborating on a more detailed study of the Roopkund bones with the center’s director, Lalji Singh, and Kumarasamy Thangaraj, a geneticist who had headed up the previous DNA analysis. By the time work began, in 2015, the team, led by the Reich lab and the laboratory in Hyderabad, also included researchers at Pennsylvania State University, the Broad Institute of M.I.T. and Harvard, the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, and the Anthropological Survey of India, where many of the Roopkund bones reside.  Not long before the COVID-19 pandemic shut down the U.S., I visited Reich at Harvard Medical School. His office is a minimalist space with a whiteboard, a table, and a wall of glass looking across Avenue Louis Pasteur to the red brick façade of the Boston Latin School. Reich is a lean, fit man in his mid-forties who speaks with rapid, quiet precision. His self-deprecating manner conceals a supremely self-confident iconoclast who is not averse to toppling received wisdom, and his work has attracted criticism from some anthropologists, archeologists, and social scientists. The Reich lab, the foremost unit in the country for research into ancient DNA, is responsible for more than half the world’s published data in the field. Having so far sequenced the DNA of more than ten thousand long-dead individuals from all over the globe, the lab is almost halfway through a five-year project to create an atlas of human migration and diversity, allowing us to peer deep into our past. The work has produced startling insights into who we are as a species, where we have come from, and what we have done to one another. Hidden in the human genome is evidence of inequality, the displacement of peoples, invasion, mass rape, and large-scale killing. Under the scrutiny of science, the dead are becoming eloquent.  Last year, Reich led a team of more than a hundred researchers who published a study in Science that examined the genomes of some two hundred and seventy ancient skeletons from the Iberian Peninsula. It’s long been known that, from around 2500 to 2000 B.C., major new artistic and cultural styles flourished in Western and Central Europe. Archeologists have tended to explain this development as the result of cultural diffusion: people adopted innovations in pottery, metalworking, and weaponry from their geographic neighbors, along with new burial customs and religious beliefs. But the DNA of Iberian skeletons dating from this period of transformation told a different story, revealing what Reich describes as the “genetic scar” of a foreign invasion.

In Iberia during this time, the local type of Y chromosome was replaced by an entirely different type. Given that the Y chromosome, found only in males, is passed down from father to son, this means that the local male line in Iberia was essentially extinguished. It is likely that the newcomers perpetrated a large-scale killing of local men, boys, and possibly male infants. Any local males remaining must have been subjugated in a way that prevented them from fathering children, or were so strongly disfavored in mate selection over time that their genetic contribution was nullified. The full genetic sequencing, however, indicated that about sixty per cent of the lineage of the local population was passed on, which shows that women were not killed but almost certainly subjected to widespread sexual coercion, and perhaps even mass rape.

We can get a sense of this reign of terror by thinking about what took place when the descendants of those ancient Iberians sailed to the New World, events for which we have ample historical records. The Spanish conquest of the Americas produced human suffering on a grotesque scale war, mass murder, rape, slavery, genocide, starvation, and pandemic disease. Genetically, as Reich noted, the outcome was very similar: in Central and South America, large amounts of European DNA mixed into the local population, almost all of it coming from European males. The same Y-chromosome turnover is also found in Americans of African descent. On average, a Black person in America has an ancestry that is around eighty per cent African and twenty per cent European. But about eighty per cent of that European ancestry is inherited from white males genetic testimony to the widespread rape and sexual coercion of female slaves by slaveowners.

In the Iberian study, the predominant Y chromosome seems to have originated with a group called the Yamnaya, who arose about five thousand years ago, in the steppes north of the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea. By adopting the wheel and the horse, they became powerful and fearsome nomads, expanding westward into Europe as well as east- and southward into India. They spoke proto-Indo-European languages, from which most of the languages of Europe and many South Asian languages now spring. Archeologists have long known about the spread of the Yamnaya, but almost nothing in the archeological record showed the brutality of their takeover. “This is an example of the power of ancient DNA to reveal cultural events,” Reich told me.

It also shows how DNA evidence can upset established archeological theories and bring rejected ones back into contention. The idea that Indo-European languages emanated from the Yamnaya homeland was established in 1956, by the Lithuanian-American archeologist Marija Gimbutas. Her view, known as the Kurgan hypothesis named for the distinctive burial mounds that spread west across Europe is now the most widely accepted theory about Indo-European linguistic origins. But, where many archeologists envisaged a gradual process of cultural diffusion, Gimbutas saw “continuous waves of expansion or raids.” As her career progressed, her ideas became more controversial. In Europe previously, Gimbutas hypothesized, men and women held relatively equal places in a peaceful, female-centered, goddess-worshipping society as evidenced by the famous fertility figurines of the time. She believed that the nomads from the Caspian steppes imposed a male-dominated warrior culture of violence, sexual inequality, and social stratification, in which women were subservient to men and a small number of élite males accumulated most of the wealth and power.  The DNA from the Iberian skeletons can’t tell us what kind of culture the Yamnaya replaced, but it does much to corroborate Gimbutas’s sense that the descendants of the Yamnaya caused much greater disruption than other archeologists believed. Even today, the Y chromosomes of almost all men of Western European ancestry have a high percentage of Yamnaya-derived genes, suggesting that violent conquest may have been widespread.  The team members of the Roopkund study planned a variety of tests for the bones. DNA sequencing would show the ancestry of the victims and whether they were related to one another, and carbon dating would estimate when they died. The researchers would test for disease, and analyze the chemistry of the bones to determine the victims’ diet and where they might have grown up. Under sterile conditions, the scientists in Hyderabad drilled into long bones and teeth, producing a powder. Vials of this were sent to Harvard and to other labs in India, the United States, and Germany.  An ancient human bone is packed with DNA, but, in many cases, ninety-nine per cent or more of that is not human. It is the DNA of billions of microbes that colonized the body during the decomposition after death. To tease the tiny fraction of human DNA from this mass of microbial debris requires a chemical ballet of enormous delicacy, and the risk of contamination is high. Stray DNA molecules from people who handled the remains can ruin an entire sample.

David Reich’s lab has a “clean room” for extracting and processing DNA from human tissue. Personnel pass through a dressing area, where they don a full-body clean suit with booties and hood, double pairs of nitrile gloves (the inner one sealed to the suit with tape around the wrists), a hairnet, a face mask, and a plastic shield. The clean room is maintained at positive pressure, which keeps the airflow directed outward, to curtail the entry of airborne DNA. After anything is touched in the room, the outer pair of gloves must be stripped off and a fresh pair put on, in order to prevent the transfer of DNA from surface to surface. Intense ultraviolet light shines whenever the room is empty, to destroy stray DNA. The light is shut off when the lab is occupied, because it burns human skin and eyes.

When I visited, a technician was working on a nubbin of bone from an ancient Roman who lived in Belgium. The whine of a sandblaster filled the air as she removed excess bone from a tiny treasure chest of DNA—a spiral cavity in the inner ear called the cochlea. The bone in which the cochlea is embedded is the densest in the body, and provides the best source of preserved DNA in ancient remains. DNA this old breaks up into short strands. Getting enough to sequence requires complex processes, one of which involves placing samples in a machine that produces a polymerase chain reaction, copying the fragments up to a billion times. The lab doesn’t sequence the entire DNA molecule, much of which is repetitious and uninformative, but maps about a million key locations.

Reich had asked a graduate student in his lab, Éadaoin Harney, to take charge of the Roopkund project. Her role was to analyze the Roopkund DNA, wrangle the worldwide team, assemble the results, and write the resulting paper as its lead author. (She has since taken a job as a postdoctoral researcher at the genomics firm 23andMe.) By the middle of 2017, it was apparent that the Roopkund bones belonged to three distinct groups of people. Roopkund A had ancestry typical of South Asians. They were unrelated to one another and genetically diverse, apparently coming from various areas and groups in India. Roopkund C was a lone individual whose genome was typical of Southeast Asia. It was the Roopkund B group, a mixture of men and women unrelated to one another, that confounded everyone. Their genomes did not look Indian or even Asian. “Of all places in the world, India is one of the places most heavily sampled in terms of human diversity,” Reich told me. “We have sampled three hundred different groups in India, and there’s nothing there even close to Roopkund B.”

Harney and Reich began exploring the ancestry of the Roopkund B group, comparing the genomes with hundreds of present-day populations across Europe, Asia, and Africa. The closest match was with people from the Greek island of Crete. “It would be a mistake to say these people were specifically from Crete,” Reich said. “A very careful analysis showed they don’t match perfectly. They are clearly a population of the Aegean area.” The Roopkund B group made up more than a third of the samples tested—fourteen individuals out of thirty-eight. Since the bones at the lake were not collected systematically, the finding hinted that the Mediterranean group in total might have been quite large. One-third of three hundred, the lower estimate of the Roopkund dead, is a hundred people.

As bizarre as the result seemed, it nonetheless matched an analysis of bone collagen that the Max Planck Institute and the Harvard lab had done on the same individuals, to determine their diet. Dietary information is stored in our bones, and plants, depending on how they fix carbon during photosynthesis, create one of two chemical signatures C3 or C4. A person who eats a diet of C3 plants, such as wheat, barley, and rice, will have isotope ratios of carbon in their bones different from those of a person eating a diet high in millets, which are C4. Sure enough, the analysis of Roopkund bone collagen revealed that, in the last ten or so years of their lives, the Roopkund A people ate a varied C3 and C4 diet, typical for much of India; Roopkund B ate a mostly C3 diet, typical of the Mediterranean.

During the study, the Reich lab had divided up its bone-powder samples, sending one portion to the carbon-14-dating laboratory at Penn State. (Doing this rather than having the Penn State samples sent straight from Hyderabad was a way of insuring that the labs were working on the same individuals.) When the carbon-dating results came back, there was another surprise: there appeared to have been multiple mass-death events at Roopkund. The Roopkund A individuals probably died in three or possibly four incidents between 700 and 950 A.D. The Roopkund B group—from the Mediterranean—likely perished in a single event a thousand years later. Because carbon-14 dating is difficult to interpret for the period between 1650 and 1950, the deaths could have occurred anytime during that span, but with a slightly higher probability in the eighteenth century. The lone person of Southeast Asian ancestry in Roopkund C died around the same time.

The eighteenth-century date was so unexpected that Reich and Harney at first thought it might be a typo, or that the samples had been contaminated. Harney wrote up the findings, in a paper co-authored by twenty-seven other scientists. She told me, “We hoped that after the paper was published someone would come forward with information that would help us determine what might have happened at Roopkund some historian or a person with knowledge of a group of European travellers who vanished in the Himalayas around that time.”

When William Sax learned of the results, he was incredulous. He had spent years in the mountain villages below the lake, among the devotees of Nanda Devi. The women consider themselves to be keepers of the goddess’s memory, and Sax had recorded and translated many of their songs and stories of the pilgrimage. He feels certain that if a large party of travellers, especially foreign travellers, had died at Roopkund in recent centuries, there would have been some record in folklore. After all, despite the new study’s surprises, the Roopkund A group was not inconsistent with the earlier findings.

“I never heard a word, not a hint of a story, no folktale or anything,” Sax told me. “And there’s absolutely no reason to be up there if they weren’t on the pilgrimage.” The idea of a group of eighteenth-century Greeks on a Hindu pilgrimage seemed far-fetched. A simpler explanation would be that the Roopkund B bones somehow got mixed up while sitting in storage. “It is quite possible that these bones were contaminated,” he said, and the researchers were simply taking their provenance on trust: “They didn’t actually collect them themselves.” Having been fascinated with the region’s way of life for four decades, he also found the scientists’ perspective lacking. “This isn’t just a story about bones,” he said. “It’s also a story about human beings and religious devotion.”

Many anthropologists and archeologists are uneasy about the incursion of genomics into their domain and suspicious of its brash certainties. “We’re not schooled in the nuances,” Reich admitted to me. “Anthropologists and geneticists are two groups speaking different languages and getting to know each other.” Research into human origins and the differences between populations is always vulnerable to misuse. The grim history of eugenics still casts a shadow over genetics—a field with limitless appeal for white supremacists and others looking to support racist views even though, for half a century, geneticists have rejected the idea of large hereditary disparities among human populations for the great majority of traits. Genetic science was vital in discrediting racist biological theories and establishing that racial categories are ever-shifting social constructs that do not align with genetic variation. Still, some anthropologists, social scientists, and even geneticists are deeply uncomfortable with any research that explores the hereditary differences among populations. Reich is insistent that race is an artificial category rather than a biological one, but maintains that “substantial differences across populations” exist. He thinks that it’s not unreasonable to investigate those differences scientifically, although he doesn’t undertake such research himself. “Whether we like it or not, people are measuring average differences among groups,” he said. “We need to be able to talk about these differences clearly, whatever they may be. Denying the possibility of substantial differences is not for us to do, given the scientific reality we live in.”

In 2018, Reich published a book, “Who We Are and How We Got Here,” about how genetic science is revolutionizing our understanding of our species. After he presented material from the book as an Op-Ed in the Times, sixty-seven anthropologists, social scientists, and others signed an open letter on BuzzFeed, titled “How Not to Talk About Race and Genetics.” The scholars complained that Reich’s “skillfulness with ancient and contemporary DNA should not be confused with a mastery of the cultural, political, and biological meanings of human groups,” and that Reich “critically misunderstands and misrepresents concerns” regarding the use of such loaded terms as “race” and “population.”

Reich’s lab now has an ethics-and-outreach officer, Jakob Sedig, whose job is to work with some of the cultural groups being studied, to understand and respond to their sensitivities. “We are mapping genetic groups to archeological cultures,” Sedig, who has a Ph.D. in anthropology from the University of Colorado, explained. “How we’re defining these groups genetically is not how they see themselves culturally. We don’t want to discredit other people’s beliefs, but we don’t want to censor our research based on those beliefs. There’s no one answer. You need a dialogue from the beginning.”

Reich acknowledges that geneticists need to be careful about how they discuss their work. He said that the majority of archeologists and anthropologists welcome the insights that genetic research provides, although “there are a small number of Luddites who want to break our machines.” In our conversations, Reich emphasized that the findings of geneticists were almost always unexpected and tended to explode stereotypes. “Again and again, I’ve found my own biases and expectations to be wrong,” he said. “It should make us realize that the stories we tell ourselves about our past are often very different from the reality, and we should have humility about that.” When I asked him for examples, he mentioned the origin of “white people” light-skinned people from Europe and parts of western Asia. He assumed (as did most scientists) that whites represented a stable lineage that had spread across western Eurasia tens of thousands of years ago and established a relatively homogeneous population. But his research showed that as recently as eight thousand years ago there were at least four distinct groups of Europeans, as genetically different from one another as the British are from the Chinese today, some with brown skin color. As he put it in an e-mail, “ ‘White people’ simply didn’t exist 8,000 years ago.”

Around 500 B.C., the Greek traveller Scylax of Caryanda is said to have journeyed through parts of the Indian subcontinent and sailed down the Indus River. In his writings, known only from secondary sources, Scylax called the river Indos, from which the English name for the subcontinent derives. Alexander the Great invaded India in 326 B.C., having previously swept through what is now Afghanistan and Pakistan. His armies traversed the Indus plains and reached as far as the Beas River before turning back. There was lasting Hellenic influence in the region for centuries, although the eventual decline of Greek civilization largely brought direct contact with Greece to an end.

Perhaps, the Roopkund researchers thought, there might be a tribe or a group in India descended from Greeks. Alexander left behind commanders and soldiers in some of the territories he conquered, many of whom stayed. Members of the Kalash tribe, in northern Pakistan, claim to be descendants of Alexander’s soldiers. (This was the inspiration for Rudyard Kipling’s story “The Man Who Would Be King.”) The Kalash are a distinct people with their own language and an ancient, animistic religion. Genetic research suggests that the Kalash have a Western European origin, and one disputed study found Greek heritage. On investigation, Reich’s team found that the modern genetic profile of the Kalash did not resemble that of Roopkund B. Two centuries before Christ, parts of northern India, Pakistan, and Afghanistan formed the Indo-Greek Kingdom, the easternmost state of the Hellenic world. But, again, Roopkund B didn’t resemble any populations living there now.

Could Roopkund B have come from an unsampled population in India descended from Greeks or a related group?

In this scenario, an enclave of migrants to India never admixed with South Asians, and retained their genetic heritage. But the genetics of Roopkund B, showing no sign of isolation or inbreeding, ruled this out, too. And then there was the stubborn fact that the Roopkund B people ate a diet more consistent with the Mediterranean than with India. The evidence pointed to one conclusion: they were Mediterranean travellers who somehow got to Roopkund, where they died in a single, terrible event. And yet the historians I consulted, specialists in South Asian and Greek history and authorities in the history of Himalayan mountaineering, said that, in recent centuries, there was no evidence of a large group of unrelated people from the eastern Mediterranean men and women travelling in the Himalayas before 1950.

Since the study was published, one of the most determined investigators of the mystery has been a recently retired archeologist named Stuart Fiedel, whose main research focus is the migration of Paleo-Americans into the New World from Asia. “I hate unsolved mysteries,” Fiedel told me. “It makes zero sense that a party of male and female Greek islanders would be participating in a Hindu pilgrimage around 1700 or 1800. That’s because, one, there is no documented presence of any substantial Greek communities in northern India at those times, and, two, there is no record of Europeans converting to Hinduism or Buddhism in those periods.”

He sent Harney and Reich a string of e-mails proposing alternatives to the Mediterranean theory. Fiedel contends that the mitochondrial DNA lineages and the Y-chromosomal DNA lineages of the Roopkund B group are rare or absent in the population of the Greek islands, but are relatively common in Armenians and other peoples of the Caucasus. His preferred hypothesis is that the Roopkund B people were Armenian traders. Armenians travelled widely in Tibet, India, and Nepal during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, trading in pearls, amber, and deer musk, a precious ingredient in perfume. Several large Indian cities have Armenian communities that go back centuries. “They might have been hanging with some major Hindu party trying to sell them stuff,” Fiedel said. Noting that nothing of value was found on the bodies, he speculated that the travellers were killed by Thuggees, a cult of robbers and murderers whose fearsome reputation in British India gave us the word “thug.” Thuggees were said to attach themselves to travellers or groups of pilgrims, gaining their trust and then robbing and murdering them on a remote stretch of road. “The Thuggees would make off with kids,” Fiedel said. “Everybody in the Roopkund B population is mature. There isn’t any gold on the skeletons, no rings, necklaces, or anklets on the victims. Who removed those things? And they were dumped in water. The Thuggees would dump people in water.”

Reich and Harney reject Fiedel’s genetic interpretation. Reich wrote back to him saying that the full DNA from Roopkund B was “extremely different from Armenians both modern and ancient.” What’s more, scholars increasingly view British reports about Thuggees as inaccurate or embellished, reflecting the colonialist fear and incomprehension of the country they occupied. Some historians question whether the Thuggees even existed.

Reich and Fiedel did agree, however, that Sax’s suspicion that the bones could have simply been mixed up was unsustainable. A jumble of bones from a poorly curated storage area would not have the consistency of age, type, diet, and genetics displayed by the Roopkund B remains. The data would be all over the map. Besides, even if these bones were proved to have been mislabelled, that would merely create another mystery: how did a bunch of eighteenth-century Greek bones get into a storage vault in India?

For the time being, Roopkund holds its secrets, but it remains possible that an answer will eventually be found. Veena Mushrif-Tripathy, a bioarcheologist on the previous study and a co-author of the new one, pointed out that Roopkund is so remote and inhospitable—in 2003, when she and her colleagues went to collect bones, altitude sickness forced her to turn back there has never been a systematic archeological investigation of the site. All the bones studied so far have been picked up haphazardly, a flawed way of sampling that often skews results. A careful excavation, she believes, might solve the mystery, especially if it is able to plumb the lake itself. The water is frozen most of the year, so the skeletons and artifacts visible on the lake bed have been kept safe from looters and souvenir hunters. “Inside the lake, you can get more preserved bones with soft tissues,” she said. “And if they are Greek people we should get some artifacts or tools or something which we can trace back to Greece.”

And what of Nanda Devi? The new study established that multiple groups had died at the lake centuries apart. Did everyone die in hailstorms? Mushrif-Tripathy thinks that a hailstorm was probably involved in one mass death but that most people had likely just died of exposure. According to Ayushi Nayak, who performed the isotopic bone analyses at the Max Planck Institute, Hindu pilgrims sometimes go barefoot and thinly clothed to sacred sites in the Himalayas as a spiritual challenge. Completing the pilgrimage in this way is a sign that the goddess favors you and wants you to survive. In other words, most of the Roopkund dead probably perished as Sax almost did, when he was an undergraduate staggering around in a sudden blizzard and looking for their companions.

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Woman who killed girl, 7, by slashing her throat on Mother's Day may never be freed

Eltiona Skana today showed no emotion as a judge told her she may never be freed from hospital after her paranoid schizophrenia was judged to be 'the driver' behind the horror which saw her cut little Emily Jones' throat in park

By Joseph Wilkes Reporter, Seamus McDonnell & Danya Bazaraa

5:50, 8 DEC 2020Updated18:30, 8 DEC 2020

A woman who killed a seven-year-old girl by slitting her throat in a park on Mother's Day has been handed a life sentence with a minimum term of 8 years.  Eltiona Skana, 30, may never be freed as a judge handed her a hybrid sentence after hearing from a psychiatrist that her paranoid schizophrenia was "the driver for this act."  Emily Jones tragically died after the horrific attack in Queen's Park, Bolton, on March 22 this year.  Skana was previously found not guilty of murder after a trial but earlier had admitted to manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility.  Today at Manchester Minshull Street Crown Court Judge Mr Justice Wall handed her a hybrid sentence, meaning she will only be sent to prison if her treatment allows it and if she is never fit to be released to prison she will remain in hospital indefinitely.  He told her: “What this means is that you will be detained in hospital until no longer necessary. If or when it’s no longer necessary you will be released to prison.”

Consultant psychiatrist Dr Helen Whitworth told Judge Mr Justice Wall that Skana "needs to be monitored full time, probably for the rest of her life."

She said Skana may have a "lack of insight" into her own condition which could account for her "clear history" of losing contact with mental health services and not taking medication.  When asked if she thought the schizophrenia was the cause of Skana’s actions on March 22 she says it was likely.  She said: "My view is that this illness was the driver for this act and in my opinion it follows that only effective control of her mental illness will be the way to achieve full control and management of risk."

If these symptoms are not managed the defendant represents a "clear danger to the public", the doctor added, with a a hospital being the most appropriate place for Skana to be treated and that in prison officers might not spot the "subtle signs of relapse" that come with her mental condition.  Dr Whitworth was asked about the possibility of a hybrid order including both a hospital and prison sentence, under questioning from prosecution barrister Michael Brady.  She said the average length of stay for patients at Rampton Hospital where Eltiona Skana is currently being treated is around seven years, but people with severe conditions like the defendant are likely to be under treatment for much longer.  She added: "In my opinion the safest way to manage Miss Skana’s case would be for her to be under the care of a mental health team."

Skana showed no reaction as she was sentenced.  The 30-year-old could be seen in the dock in Manchester during the sentencing hearing.  Throughout the trial she had appeared via a video link but she appeared in person in court for sentence.  Emily's father Mark Jones was also in court to see the sentence passed.  Chilling video shared by Greater Manchester Police upon sentencing shows the arrest of Skana moments after the attack.  In it a woman can be heard saying "I think she's killed someone" as police arrest Skana.

Simon Csoka QC, for the defence, told Mr Justice Wall that it is his case Skana would be in hospital under care for longer than she would be in prison.  He says: "On the specific facts of this case, the public interest aligned with a Section 37/51 order [hospital order].  Under such a regime, the amount of time she is detained is likely to be at least as long if not longer than a hybrid order or even a life sentence.”

Emily's devastated dad told the court the family's future had been "taken away" after he described running for his daughter and begging her 'don't leave me'.

In court today, a heartbreaking victim impact statement was read from Emily’s dad, Mark Jones, who described his daughter as a "kind child" who was "bright and funny".

"Emily was a vulnerable child full of innocence and wonder, she was just starting off on her path of life and her future was cut short," he said.

"Our future has also been taken away, how can we enjoy life when the best part of it has been taken away?"

Over the course of a seven-day hearing at Manchester Minshull Street Crown Court, a jury was told Emily was killed by Skana as she was riding her scooter through the park.  The child had been riding to meet her mother when the defendant sprang from a bench, grabbed her and then sliced her across the neck with a craft knife she had bought that morning.  Mr Justice Wall explained in court today that he has reservations about Skana’s intentions before she attacked Emily.  He said it is "without question" that she was likely suffering from a psychotic episode when the incident happened, based on the evidence from psychiatric experts heard in court.  But he also said he is concerned that Skana appears to have lied to a mental health nurse on March 11 when she said she had been taking her medication.  Police found a month’s worth of unused pills in her home after the incident.  Dr Whitworth had previously been asked to make a report for the sentencing.  She said it was "extremely common" for people suffering from paranoid schizophrenia to think they do not need their medication.  Emily's father previously described the moment he knew he was losing his little girl.  He said: “I ran for Emily. I was absolutely terrified. I just knew it was so bad. You don’t survive these things.  I just thought, 'Oh my God, I’m going to lose her, I’m going to lose her.' I was shouting, 'Just stay with me Emily, stay with me. Don’t leave me.'”

On Friday, prosecution barrister Mr Brady told the jury the Crown Prosecution Service would no longer pursue a murder charge and asked them to find Skana not guilty of that offence.  Speaking to the jury, he said the prosecution had decided that was 'no longer any realistic prospect of conviction' for murder.  "This is not a decision that has been taken lightly by the Crown," he said.

"It's a decision taken with care and mindful of the sensitivity of this case."

He explained that the decision to drop the charge had come following evidence from Dr Saifullah Syed Afghan a consultant forensic psychiatrist who is treating Skana at Rampton Hospital.  He told the court he had no 'alternative' explanation for her actions, aside from previous explanations of psychosis brought on by her diagnosed paranoid schizophrenia.  The jury then found Skana not guilty of murder. 

'We cannot move on, because at this time, we cannot see a future'

Emily's parents Sarah and Mark wrote a moving impact statement in tribute to their daughter. saying: "How can you put into words how you feel about the senseless death of your only child? It is just too difficult to comprehend.   Emily was the beat in our hearts, the spring in our step and the reason we got up every morning.  Emily was our beautiful, spirited little girl, a bundle of energy with an infectious personality.  She was bright and funny, a kind child with not a mean bone in her body.  Emily loved life and had not a care in the world.  One smile from Emily and she had her daddy wrapped around her little finger.  Emily was a loveable child, full of innocence and wonder.  She was just starting out on her path of life and her future has cruelly been cut so short.  Our future has also been taken away, how can you enjoy life when the biggest part of it isn't there anymore?  We will never see Emily grow and become the wonderful young lady we knew she would become, we will never see her hold her own child in her arms, as we held her.  Emily brought out something special in everyone who was lucky enough to be in her life.  The loss of Emily has had a profound and significant impact, not just on her family, but the whole community.  Emily was someone’s school friend, a play mate and of course a grand daughter and a niece, and she meant something very special and unique to each and every one of them.  The last 9 months have been spent in limbo.  We cannot move on, because at this time, we cannot see a future. We can only focus on today, it is literally one day at a time."

'A dangerous offender'

A Greater Manchester Police spokesperson said today: "Skana has been sentenced under the Mental Health Act 2003 and has been deemed a dangerous offender so will need to be medically assessed before being considered for release.  On Sunday 22 March 2020, 7-year-old Emily Jones was riding her scooter through Queen's Park with her father, Mark when she began scooting towards her mother, Sarah who was jogging through the park.  On her journey, Emily was scooting past a bench that Skana was sitting on and completely unprovoked; Skana got up and grabbed Emily before attacking her with a knife and throwing her to the ground.  Emily's father immediately ran to her aid whilst Skana fled on foot towards the exit of the park, followed by a member of the public who bravely managed to detain her until police arrived at the scene.  Emily was rushed to hospital but had tragically sustained an un-survivable neck injury and sadly passed away despite the best efforts of medical professionals and her family.  Skana has remained in secure facilities ever since this incident."

Senior Investigating Officer Duncan Thorpe, of GMP's Major Incident Team, said: "This was an absolutely devastating incident that has left Emily's parents and family completely heartbroken and I know it sent shockwaves across the country as everyone mourned the loss of this innocent little girl.  Emily was taken from her family and friends in the worst possible way. No sentence can ever undo what happened on that awful day in March, but Emily's spirit will live on in her family and I know that she will never be forgotten."

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I'm A Celeb fans fear Hollie Arnold will be first star axed in brutal elimination

EXCLUSIVE: I'm A Celebrity... Get Me Out Of Here! viewers have voted Hollie Arnold as the first star to be eliminated from Gwrych Castle in a brand new Mirror Online survey

By Brogan-Leigh Hurst Showbiz Reporter

02:06, 27 NOV 2020Updated03:14, 27 NOV 2020

I'm A Celebrity... Get Me Out Of Here! fans fear Paralympian Hollie Arnold will be the first star to get axed from the show.  The new series has only been on screens for just over one week, but it's set to cause chaos as Friday night will see the first elimination of the show's 20th season.  A survey held by Mirror Online revealed that 32% of fans think that Hollie won't be on the reality show for much longer.  She received a total of 3,359 votes as the first star to be booted off the gruelling competition.  Former Strictly star AJ Pritchard is shortly behind her in second place.  The ballroom dancer received 1,276 responses and 12% of the vote for him to be kicked out of Gwrych Castle after Hollie.  The results show new campmate Ruthie Henshall, former EastEnders star Jessica Plummer and ex-soap star Shane Richie in joint third place.  However with a total of 1,027 responses, Ruthie is more likely to be the third star to get axed by the public vote, according to our data.  Victoria Derbyshire, Beverley Callard and Giovanna Fletcher have landed themselves in a safe place as 5% of viewers voted for them as fourth.  But the journalist is less safe than the rest of her co-stars as she received 562 votes, which puts her at a higher risk of being booted off sooner than Beverley, with 502 votes, and Giovanna, with 499.  Russell Watson, Sir Mo Farah, Vernon Kay and Jordan North are the most likeable stars suggesting one of them could be crowned the winner.  It appears 3% of viewers voted for the boys to be the fifth star to leave the show.  Jordan is the most safe out of Russell and Mo as he only has 325 votes, whereas Russell has 350 and Mo has 346.  Vernon Kay is the least likely star to be eliminated as he comes out safe at the bottom of the results.  Only 2% of fans voted for the TV presenter to go out, which suggests they like his bubbly character.

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