logo
Brit tourist, 61, dies in Turkey after being run over by 'drunk driver' TWICE

Brit tourist, 61, dies in Turkey after being run over by 'drunk driver' TWICE

Daily Mirrora day ago
A British woman has died in Turkey after she was run over twice by the same car. an allegedly drunk driver
Lisa Di Palma, from east London, was hit by a car while on a pedestrian crossing in Fethiye, Turkey where she was on holiday with her husband celebrating their wedding anniversary. The incident occurred on August 6 and left her with serious injuries.
Keith Di Palma told how his wife Lisa, 61, was hit on a pedestrian crossing on the Cahit Beğenç Boulevard in the Foça neighbourhood of Fethiye. He claimed that in a bid to drive off and leave the scene, the driver had struck her a second time.
The couple, from Hornchurch, east London, had been enjoying a Fethiye, a port city in southwestern Turkey, when Lisa was struck in the road accident and taken to hospital.
The couple were on holiday in Turkey to celebrate their wedding anniversary. She wrote on Instagram: 'Happy 36th Anniversary to the one I am proud to call my husband the one who picks me up when I am down and the one who is always there for me here's to many more happy years together love you Keithy boy."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Drug gangster Jamie Rothwell jailed after ordering shootings from Barcelona flat
Drug gangster Jamie Rothwell jailed after ordering shootings from Barcelona flat

Daily Mirror

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Drug gangster Jamie Rothwell jailed after ordering shootings from Barcelona flat

Salford gangster Jamie Rothwell has been sentenced to 43 years behind bars after admitting a string of drug and gun offences - which were laid bare in an encrypted messaging system A notorious gangster who orchestrated assassinations, organised huge drug transactions, and trafficked lethal firearms from his Barcelona flat to the UK has been jailed. ‌ Salford gangster Jamie Rothwell was jailed for 43 years after admitting to a string of offences. His sentence is comprised of 18 years for drugs offences and a consecutive 25 year extended sentence for firearms offences, including 21 years in prison and an extra four years on licence. Rothwell, a leading member of the Manchester's Anti A-Team gang, ordered shootings, arranged gun deals and moved huge quantities of drugs over an encrypted phone network before he was found by police "hiding out" at an apartment in Barcelona. ‌ The 38-year-old was involved in a feud between warring factions in the city between 2014 and 2019. He was shot in a car wash and later acquitted of conspiracy to murder as a row between the A-Team and the Anti A-Team exploded. It comes after police shame British drugs mules by making them pose for photos with suitcases. ‌ At Manchester Crown Court on Thursday, Judge John Potter said Rothwell placed "hundreds of firearms into the UK." Quoting EncroChat messages, the judge explained how Rothwell said he was involved in a 'six month war' with someone, and that he 'went on a rampage'. The court also heard his dealing was at an "international level", with the value of the drugs running into millions of pounds. "You obtained wealth by having access to millions of pounds of cash," the judge told Rothwell, who lived in Portugal and Spain and took pictures of an apartment in Barcelona and its 'vista' which he sent on EncroChat - where he advertised a "vast arsenal of weapons" on the system. Judge Potter told Rothwell that "at your command" a man was shot in Warrington. "Mr Rothwell, you have lived much of your life as a professional criminal involved in serious organised crime," the judge said. "The offences you fall to be sentenced for graphically illustrate your willingness to follow this path and cause loss and misery to others as you do so." ‌ Rothwell's sentencing comes after he was brought to justice for ordering a shooting from Spain, and for his involvement in industrial scale cocaine dealing. In February he pleaded guilty to conspiracy to possess firearms with intent to endanger life; conspiracy to possess ammunition with intent to endanger life; conspiracy to supply a controlled drug of Class A, namely cocaine, conspiracy to supply a controlled drug of Class B, namely ketamine and two counts of conspiracy to cause grievous bodily harm with intent. His crimes were revealed after European law enforcement infiltrated the EncroChat communications network, which was used by criminals who believed it was impenetrable. Manchester Crown Court previously heard how Rothwell used Encrochat to plan violence and supply deadly weapons alongside a string of associates, including James Close - known as 'Ballsniffer' - as well as Craig Makinson and Callum Morris. ‌ In April 2020, Rothwell set his sights on rival Leon Cullen, telling one contact: "I've give Leon a way out... he a grass... he turned on me for nothing... tried kill me... while my daughter there... he my only enemy... when he lands in UK that's when it starts." He also targeted notorious gangster Liam Byrne, sharing Byrne's address with user 'Caperocket' and sending Google Earth images. "I'm gonna do them all soon," he wrote. On April 24, a van linked to Rothwell was caught on CCTV outside a house in Warrington. Prosecutor Jaime Hamilton KC said: "David Barnes went to answer the door. He opened the door and recalled hearing the words 'pizza delivery'. He also believed that he saw a number of pizza boxes." ‌ Mr Hamilton added: "As the door was closing he heard two shots and a third shot after he closed the door. His recollection is that the third shot passed through the door and struck him in the leg." The next day, Rothwell bragged to 'Caperocket', saying "I done two same time." When asked "who did you get yesterday" he replied: "I got the dad... Liam... I took Leon dad door of (sic) also." Rothwell's Encrochat exchanges revealed his deep involvement in the illegal firearms trade. When Makinson messaged: "Any glocks," Rothwell replied: "No bro... soon though mate... if u ever need one u could borrow." Morris asked about cheap metals a 9mm or a pump shotgun, prompting Rothwell to send Makinson photos of AK-47s, saying "few aks for sale" at £10,500 each. In one deal, Morris collected £10,500 from Makinson for an AK-47 in Warrington. Rothwell told him the gun would be loaded and to "be careful". Minutes later, Morris sent him a photo of the weapon. Rothwell's response was: "Makes me hard that bro." Later that month, Rothwell asked if there was a boat near Southampton to offload 28 kilos of cocaine. He also offered to "drop" Morris a Glock. In another conversation with username 'Tubbytern', Rothwell boasted: "I sent 300 straps home... I got RPG, M16, Aks, Glock Machines." To Makinson, he claimed: "I sell a lot of Glocks." He even referenced the case for which he was wanted at the time in the UK (offences of which he was ultimately acquitted) but referenced them as "because a few women got shot". Reflecting on the violence he was orchestrating, Rothwell told one associate: "when you have fire in your heart... you don't stop... you get addicted... you lose everyone... you turn cold, no emotions.... egos at first I agree... but then when you in, hard to go back."

The hypocrisy of Tulip Siddiq
The hypocrisy of Tulip Siddiq

Spectator

time4 hours ago

  • Spectator

The hypocrisy of Tulip Siddiq

The corruption trial of Tulip Siddiq formally commenced in Bangladesh on Wednesday. Among other allegations linked to £3.9 billion worth of embezzlement, the Bangladeshi-origin Labour MP has been accused by the Anti-Corruption Commission of securing luxury property for her family in Dhaka, using her relationship with the country's former prime minister Sheikh Hasina, who was ousted and fled the country last August following mass protests against her rule. Prior to her election as the Labour MP for Hampstead in 2015, Siddiq, the granddaughter of Bangladesh's founding leader Sheikh Mujibur Rehman, had been a spokesperson of her aunt Hasina's Awami League in the UK even joining the former Bangladeshi prime minister on a trip to sign an arms deal with Russian president Vladimir Putin in Moscow. Even so, Siddiq has maintained that her family links, which are now the focus of the corruption allegations that she denies, have actually 'caused problems' for her, not least because the Bengali diaspora keeps asking for favours. She has claimed that having heritage rooted in Bangladesh, which she now describes as a 'foreign country', has been a challenge, given the 'racist' attitudes around her. Siddiq has frequently spoken about the rise of populism and financial inequality in the West, while her family has been subjugating the masses and overseeing the concentration of capital among the richest in Bangladesh. Regardless of whether the corruption trial in Dhaka is well-founded, or politically motivated as she insists, Siddiq's case illustrates the hypocrisy of the South Asian elite that come from privileged backgrounds but prefer to lecture on the inequalities in the West. The families of the feudal leaders of all three major Pakistani political parties, for instance, have been raised or educated in the same West that they avow hostility against. Imran Khan's British sons are currently campaigning for his release in the same US that their imprisoned father has long accused of plotting against him and his country. Oxford-educated chairman of Pakistan's historically left People's Party, Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, talks about 'Islamophobia' in the West, but has never spoken out against the spate of forced conversions of under-aged Hindu girls under his party's rule in Sindh province. Bilawal's cousin, the academic and author Fatima Bhutto, who studied and spends much of her time in the 'racist' West that she accuses of being responsible for the genocide and apartheid in Gaza, rarely has much to say about the Ahmadis or Baloch whose persecution her grandfather, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, laid the foundation of. Like the Pakistani left, the Indian left too is dominated by the elite that prefer to focus on the ailments of the West. London-born Shashi Tharoor, a member of the traditionally left Indian National Congress, who has written and spoken extensively on the evils of British colonialism, even arguing that the UK owes India reparations, has recently been leading delegations defending the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party's security policy in the region which ascertains India's stranglehold over Kashmir. Tharoor describes the ongoing US tariff negotiations as being akin to 'colonialism', and continues to find time to denounce the British Raj while being officially tasked with defending India's hegemonic geopolitical strategy, which includes dictation and intervention even in South Asian states beyond Pakistan. These self-proclaimed left-leaning convictions of the South Asian elite are not only duplicitous but more often than not unravel as soon as there is any personal cost to be paid, as evidenced by just how quickly Tulip Siddiq abandoned the Bangladeshi origin that had for a long time used earned her points inside the Labour party. Similarly, Siddiq's fellow Labour MP, Rushanara Ali, the first British Bangladeshi elected to parliament, vociferously deploys 'pro-Palestine' rhetoric, but abstained from the Gaza ceasefire vote in 2023 in line with the party whip. Zulfikar Ali Bhutto Jr speaks of the racism he faced in British schools, and undertakes queer activism in the West, but doesn't mention Islamisation, and the correlated queerphobia, initiated by his grandfather whom he is named after, owing to his political ambitions in Pakistan. The disappearing pronouns from the bios of many amid the reversal of gender ideology in Western policymaking, and the lowered decibels in 'pro-Palestine' activism at US campuses during the ongoing crackdown, underlines how the South Asian-origin left in the West is devoid of actual conviction. Indeed, much of the South Asian left's narrative-building is a parroting of the western left, which entails trashing their own states and its majority community, while rigidly embracing their minority identities that might check the diversity eye test. Zohran Mamdani's success in winning the Democratic nomination for this year's New York City mayor election, founded on a scathing critique of everyone but the community he most identified with, is illustrative of the support the left offers to members of the minority community that can showcase the least introspection. Perhaps the case that best highlights the absolute abandonment of self-reflection on the left is Rushanara Ali evicting her tenant while serving as the homelessness minister. She had to resign from the post last week. If the left is to survive its ongoing global crisis, it needs to start backing candidates that go beyond mimicking the so-called postcolonial discourse that focuses solely on the West, and exhibit a willingness to offer similar scrutiny for the minorities they identify with, as they would with the majority. This is especially true for those hailing from South Asia, where religious majoritarianism is on the rise, and where the advent of colonialism long preceded the Brits.

TV star hits out at BBC over 'disgraceful' Strictly Come Dancing snub
TV star hits out at BBC over 'disgraceful' Strictly Come Dancing snub

The National

time5 hours ago

  • The National

TV star hits out at BBC over 'disgraceful' Strictly Come Dancing snub

Narinder Kaur, a broadcaster, author and social commentator, claimed the BBC was demonstrating "unconscious bias and prejudicial views against British brown women". In a video captioned "BBC can literally kiss my ass", Kaur (below) criticised the broadcaster's decision to platform Thomas Skinner, a former Apprentice contestant turned controversial social media personality. (Image: Lucy North / PA) In her video, Kaur said: "I am so raging right now with the BBC, I'm so over the BBC. "Like you've just apologised to Robert Jenrick, and you've just taken on Thomas Skinner for Strictly Come Dancing." Kaur was referring to an apology which was issued by the BBC to the shadow justice secretary after a contributor on its Radio 4 Today programme accused him of "xenophobia". She continued: "Now I'll tell you my problem here, and you're gonna say, 'oh, she's so bitter, oh she's so–'. You can say that, do that all day long, I'm okay with that. READ MORE: BBC radio host quickly cuts off caller after 'complicit in genocide' comments "Strictly Come Dancing wouldn't take me on. We approached them, and I was told by a producer I was a little bit too controversial, you know, 'we don't need that for the show'. I accept that. "And they put on brown women every single time, brown or black women who are quiet, who don't have opinions, because that's the kind of brown women they accept – that's what their audience likes. "But God forbid you're a brown woman who has some opinions, then they'll never take you on. "But if you're a white man - Thomas Skinner, proud patriot, of the online right, who's got a criminal past charged with theft – you're alright." In 2011, Skinner was sentenced in court for handling 4992 tubes of Body Shop cleansing gels amounting to almost £40,000, as well as possessing 2000 diazepam tablets. Kaur shared the video on social media, writing: "Apparently I was deemed too controversial for @bbcstrictly because they only hire quiet brown and black women that fit in a box. "But you can be a white man AND be controversial and you'll be hired on the spot! Hello Thomas Skinner!! "#BBCStrictly your unconscious bias and prejudicial views against British brown women is disgraceful." Apparently I was deemed too controversial for @bbcstrictly because they only hire quiet brown and black women that fit in a box. But you can be a white man AND be controversial and you'll be hired on the spot! Hello Thomas Skinner!!#BBCStrictly your unconscious bias and… — Narinder Kaur (@narindertweets) August 14, 2025 Skinner replied to the video, saying: "Narinder, I respect that you stand up for what you believe in, not everyone's got the guts to do that. Yes, I've got a past, but I'm not here to divide people. I'm just trying to get people to believe in themselves and realise they can do more than they think. READ MORE: Scots schoolgirl named on Time's first Girls of the Year list for solar panel blanket "Life can be so much better when you let happiness in and don't always be angry towards others. If I've ever upset you, I'm sorry… that's never been my intention. I wish ya nothing but peace, happiness, and a life you can truly enjoy. Bosh [heart emoji]." Narinder responded: "I don't mind you have a criminal past.. you know I turned up for you. "But you DO divide.. I try to make this country fair ALL COMMUNITIES..I fight against the racism you seem to support recently." The BBC has been contacted for comment.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store