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School forced to ban children from playground as dive-bombing buzzard terrorises village

School forced to ban children from playground as dive-bombing buzzard terrorises village

Independent02-06-2025
A dive-bombing buzzard has forced a village primary school to ban children from going outside following a spate of attacks.
The bird of prey has been attacking villagers in Havering-atte-Bower, near Romford, Essex, since Easter weekend, according to residents.
Dame Tipping Primary School said 'nothing can be done' but to keep pupils inside due to the animal being a protected species.
Resident Nikki Dix, 37, said she was 'dead shocked' after the bird left scratch marks on her head while she was walking through a park in March.
'He was giving me an evil eye so then I carried on my journey for quite a while just swinging my bag above my head,' she said.
Footage showed the buzzard swooping down on Louise Whittle, a parent of a pupil at the school, as it appeared to aim for her head.
She said: 'It's absolutely bonkers that there is a buzzard attacking people. But it's been a great learning experience for the children.
'They have learnt all about buzzards that they otherwise wouldn't have done. The school has been absolutely fantastic in prioritising the children's safety and finding other alternatives for getting out.'
However, she worried that "the birds are being prioritised over the children" and voiced her hope "hopeful that they fly away so everyone can get back to normal".
Headteacher Ms McCarthy said: 'We have also introduced additional indoor breaks with lots of engaging activities including traditional board games, cup stacking competitions and puzzles.'
A Havering Council spokesperson said: "The RSPCA has advised that the buzzard may be protecting its nest or chicks, which lines up with the information we have received.
"Buzzards are protected under UK law, therefore our intervention options are very limited, and we have advised that warning signs would be the easiest solution at this time.
"We completely understand how difficult and worrying this situation is for the school and local residents and we regret that there is not a quick or straightforward solution."
In March, a rogue hawk caused mayhem in a Hertfordshire village after it began a campaign of violence, targeted mainly at tall men.
The bird, which is usually native to Brazil, Argentina and Chile, was responsible for over 20 attacks after a 'sudden change in behaviour'.
The Harris hawk was sighted several times in the historic parish village of Flamstead, with professionals and local falconers recruited in an attempt to bring the bird under control.
Speaking to The Times, Roy Lambden, 68, said he was out walking when he 'felt a whack' on his head, and soon realised he was bleeding.
'It was only from the corner of my eye that I realised it was a bird because I saw it fly away. I was one of the first to be hit by it,' he said.
'Since then, around 20 people I know have been attacked. Lots of bleeding heads — my friend who is bald has got two scars from it.'
The hawk was captured in April by a falconer, who said it had been carrying out the attacks because it was 'hormonal'.
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When Vicky O'Neill casts her mind back to life during the pandemic, one date remains forever etched in her memory. For it was on May 17, 2021, that husband John awaited his turn to have the newly-approved AstraZeneca Covid vaccine. The doting father-of-two from Althorne, Essex, was considered more at risk from Covid-19 because of his asthma and was optimistic the jab could offer a 'return to normality.' Still, moments before his appointment, the then 41-year-old turned to his wife and said he was worried about the possible side-effects. 'We were sitting in the car, just the two of us. And he said to me, "I'm going to go in and have AstraZeneca, and you're going to have the Pfizer. That means if there's any problems - because we don't know much about these vaccines - at least there is still one of us here for the kids." 'I told him not to be stupid. He went in, had his jab and didn't think anything of it.' But the IT contractor's words turned out to be a chilling foretelling of events that would forever change their lives. Within the next 10 days, John suffered a devastating stroke that would leave him blind in his left eye, paralysed down his right side and 60 per cent brain damaged, among other permanent disabilities. As he and his family would later discover, John had suffered an extremely rare reaction to the Covid jab that causes blood clots with a low platelet count. Known as VITT - vaccine-induced immune thrombocytopenia and thrombosis - medical experts said such a reaction would only happen to one in 50,000 people. Four years on, John and his loved ones acknowledge just how lucky he is to even be alive - but the repercussions continue. Now aged 46, John has been left a shadow of the man he once was, unable to work and needing full-time care. 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John's changed. I've had to change, and life is so very different,' said a tearful Vicky, who has cared for her husband full-time over the last four years. John, who still struggles with his speech in the aftermath of his stroke, simply nodded while dabbing away his tears. Looking around the lounge of their comfortable home, vibrant family photos point to an array of happier times in their life. Vicky had just turned 18 when she met John, an ambitious IT contractor who previously earned a six-figure salary. 'We were very lucky. John worked really hard and we had a good life, like we've never asked for anything. I was working as a graphic designer for an architect in London. 'We were both very career-minded, but we knew what we wanted. We bought a house together in Romford while we were still very young and we had our own cars. We done it all ourselves. You know, we had a good life.' The couple married in 2008, and four years later had their daughter, Freya, now aged 13, followed by their son, Mason, now eight. 'He's been diagnosed with autism and ADHD so he's 100 miles an hour, but the most amazing kid,' Vicky enthused. 'We had everything we wanted - life was good.' Five years ago, the couple decided to move from Romford to the more rural surrounds of Althorne to provide 'a better life for the kids'. They bought their current home and planned to renovate and extend the property, but plans were halted after the world was plunged into the Covid pandemic. Both John and Mason, who was aged just four at the time, suffered from severe asthma and out of caution the family shuttered themselves off from seeing anyone. 'We were extreme, we didn't want anyone to visit because they both had asthma and we worried about the virus. 'When this jab came out, we thought this is what we needed to get us back into the world again.' 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He presently takes 17 tablets a day and remains 'under every consultant possible'. 'John struggles with his speech and has aphasia. He also has difficulties reading and writing and recognising numbers. He's blind in his left eye. His carotid artery is now completely blocked, so doctors have to monitor him constantly to ensure he has no issues there. 'The artery in his left leg is blocked. So he has no pulse below the left knee and that causes a lot of problems. If he walks even 10 metres he gets pins and needles because of the restricted blood flow. 'His right leg was affected by the stroke and is now his weak leg. 'He's also now on the border of heart failure as a result of the stroke and we are getting him assessed for possible dementia.' Lifting his right arm and hand, John shakes his head before letting it drop. 'That arm is nothing', he added, showing he had lost the use of his limb. 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John has been eligible to claim Personal Independence Payment and Employment and Support Allowance, while Vicky has claimed Carer's Allowance and been able to work a few hours each week to supplement her income. 'But for a family of four, you just can't survive on that,' explained Vicky, who said they had struggled over the last four years and the couple have had no other option than to sell their home. John was found to fit the criteria for the Government's Vaccine Damage Payment Scheme (VDPS), which offers a one-off financial payment of £120,000 in the event that a vaccine likely caused at least 60 per cent disablement. In John's case, that figure was found to be 90 per cent - but that money alone will not be enough to financially secure the family for the years ahead. He has now joined a class action launched by Leigh Day solicitors against AstraZeneca, which was indemnified during the pandemic, and the Government, which would likely pay out if their claim is successful. Lawyers representing victims and families are suing AstraZeneca under the Consumer Protection Act 1987. They argue the vaccine was 'a defective product' that was 'not as safe as consumers generally were reasonably entitled to expect'. AstraZeneca has strongly denied these claims. Health officials first identified cases of VITT linked to AstraZeneca's jab in Europe as early as March 2021, just over two months after the vaccine was first deployed in the UK. On its website, Leigh Day stressed it was not an 'anti-vaccination' case. 'It is however a case about fairness – a case in which we are trying to secure fair compensation for those families who paid the ultimate personal price for agreeing to be vaccinated during the pandemic.' Vicky said if they were to be successful, the money would take away their financial stress - but tragically it would never bring back the life they once had. 'I was lucky that we didn't lose John, and our children were lucky that they didn't lose their dad, but they have lost him in a huge way, in every way possible. He is still here, but he's not the man he was. 'It worries me going forward, because John has lots of issues and we don't know how they are going to progress. 'Money can't buy happiness. It can make things stable, which is great, but it's not going to change what happened. It's not like having a broken arm that you can fix and go back to enjoying life, doing your job and taking the kids to the park. 'It's never going to happen for us. 'John has been robbed of his life, and he can try and make another life for himself, but it's always going to be limited because of what happened.' Vicky is keen to stress that she and her family are not against vaccinations, but feels saddened their lives were upended simply because they tried to 'do what was right'. 'We just wanted to do right by our family, our friends, the country. We just wanted to do our part in getting back to normal. 'But life is far from normal for us - and we just don't know what the future holds.' In a statement to MailOnline, Leigh Day partner Sarah Moore said: 'As a result of his injuries, John will never be able to work again, or be the husband and father that he once was for Vicky and their children. 'Presently the Government scheme provides them with a one-off payment of £120,000. That is less than John's annual earnings prior to his injuries and is wholly inadequate to provide him with the specialist care that he needs to live with his injuries let alone provide for his family. 'John stepped forward for vaccination at the Government's request, along with thousands of others, and yet when he needs the Government to stand with him and his family by providing meaningful financial support they are nowhere to be seen. 'John and others like him do not want to have to bring a legal claim, they want to put their energies into putting their lives back together. 'The fact that they are having to do so should be a cause of national shame, the pandemic was a period of national solidarity and yet, in the aftermath when the country has moved on, those injured like John have been forgotten.' Official data shows at least 81 Brits have died from blood clot complications apparently linked to the AstraZeneca jab, according to figures collected by the UK's drug watchdog, the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency. A further unconfirmed number have been injured and/or disabled. Further Covid vaccine rollouts have either minimised use of the AstraZeneca jab and/or phased it out entirely in favour of mRNA alternatives like those made by rival pharma giants Pfizer and Moderna. However, AstraZeneca's jab is credited with saving some 6million lives globally during the Covid pandemic. AstraZeneca previously said in a statement: 'Our sympathy goes out to anyone who has lost loved ones or reported health problems. 'Patient safety is our highest priority, and regulatory authorities have clear and stringent standards to ensure the safe use of all medicines, including vaccines. 'From the body of evidence in clinical trials and real-world data, the AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine has continuously been shown to have an acceptable safety profile and regulators around the world consistently state that the benefits of vaccination outweigh the risks of extremely rare potential side effects.'

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