
Brit run down and killed in front of husband while jogging as driver questioned
A British woman has been knocked down and killed abroad while out running with her husband.
Police have taken the driver into custody. The unnamed 35-year-old was jogging in the town of Beaune in eastern France when the tragedy happened on Tuesday at around 8am. Emergency services rushed to the scene and paramedics, arriving 15 minutes later, found her in cardiac arrest. Sadly they were not able to resuscitate her and she died at the scene. A 45-year-old driver of the car is now being questioned by police having been taken into custody, reported local outlet Le Bien Public. The husband of the victim is understood to have been treated for shock but he was not injured.
The Mirror has approached the Foreign Office for comment.
Meanwhile, a British woman died following a powerful gas explosion at a bar in southern Spain, last month.
The 56-year-old was one of two women killed after a gas canister exploded at the Casa Javi bar in San Pedro del Pinatar in Murcia on June 19. The unnamed Brit, who reportedly lived in the area, was going by the weekly market when she was struck by the blast.
Their deaths were confirmed a week later by the local council in a post on X. The other fatal victim was the 38-year-old owner of the bar, a woman of Moroccan origin named Hind, who suffered severe burns.
Both victims had been hospitalised following the incident which saw at least 15 other people injured. Local police, ambulances and firefighters rushed to the scene at around 12:23pm local time, following 25 calls from members of the public.
And a tourist from the UK along with her friend have been killed by a charging elephant during a 'sunrise safari walk' in Zambia.
At around 6am local time on Thursday, July 3, the victims, a 68-year-old and a 67-year-old, were attacked by a female elephant that was with a calf at South Luangwa National Park, Eastern Province Police Commissioner Robertson Mweemba said.
The two friends had been based at the Big Lagoon Bush Camp and had been enjoying an early morning walk to another part of the camp when the horror incident took place.
Mr Mweemba said: "Two female tourists while taking a safari walk to a crossing point at Luangwa river spotted an elephant with a calf at a distance and diverted about 50m away, but within few minutes after diverting a tea bearer who is usually behind saw the elephant charging at them."
The tea bearer reportedly shouted 'elephants' and as the two women turned around they saw it storming towards them at high speed. In a desperate bid to help the women, the safari guides who were with the group fired shots at the elephant.
While the elephant was hit by the gunshots, the guides were unable to prevent the attack and both women died at the scene, police said.
The pair "had spent four peaceful days immersed in nature's embrace. Their journey was meant to continue - but instead, we remember them for their courage, their curiosity, and their love for life's wild places", a local said.
The bodies of the two women were taken to Mambwe District Hospital for mortuary services, awaiting further details. Their cause of death is yet to be formally confirmed.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


ITV News
4 minutes ago
- ITV News
How to defend yourself from seagulls this summer!
If you've been to a British beach this summer, then you know that you'll have to battle sneaky seagulls who swoop in to steal your fish and chips. Dr Scott is live from Weston-Super-Mare alongside Seagull expert Dr Neeltje Boogert to tell us how we can keep ourselves safe this summer from these feathered thugs.


Daily Mirror
5 minutes ago
- Daily Mirror
Family of This Morning star killed in Air India crash received the wrong body
Fiongal and Jamie Greenlaw-Meek were on board the Air India flight bound for London that crashed shortly after taking off from Ahmedabad, killing 242 of the 243 people on board A woman who lost her brother in the Air India crash says being given the wrong remains has heaped further trauma on her grieving family. Husbands Fiongal and Jamie Greenlaw-Meek, 39 and 45 respectively, were among the 242 people killed in the crash on June 12 just outside Ahmedabad airport in India's Ahmedabad state. Fiongal's sister Arwen says the heartbroken family is now seeking accountability from the officials who mislabelled her beloved brother's remains. It comes after reports of a dad's desperate phone call moments before explosion kills him and his daughters. READ MORE: Comatose woman woke before organ harvesting surgery but 'docs operated anyway' Fiongal had been a guest on This Morning earlier this year to promote the wellness brand he'd co-founded with his husband. Speaking to the BBC, Arwen said she was also looking for "closure for the family" and "dignity" for her brother. She fears the authorities could have even cremated his body as someone else. "If that is not possible - because the worst case scenario is that he has been cremated as somebody else - then we need to know that in order to move on," she said. "Somebody mislabelled remains - that has added trauma." She accused Indian authorities of failing to set up proper "forensic protocols" at the crash site, saying that the site remained open for two days after the plane came down. "It just can't happen again," she said. "I think the whole family were and still are in complete disbelief because it is things that happen on the news and to other people. It was shocking and is confusing." According to the Foreign Office, it is supporting the families of Brits involved in the crash - giving them "dedicated caseworkers". However, on the topic of the "formal identification of bodies", it said it's out of their hands and a "matter for the Indian authorities". Last month, it emerged that some of the deceased were wrongly identified before being flown home to the UK. Relatives of one victim had to abandon funeral plans after being informed that their coffin contained the body of an unknown passenger rather than their family member, it is reported. And the "co-mingled" remnants of more than one person killed in the crash were mistakenly placed in the same casket in another shocking blunder. They had to be separated before the internment could go ahead. Of the people who died when Air India flight 171 lost power and crashed, seconds after leaving Ahmedabad for London Gatwick, 52 were returning Britons. Two instances of mistaken identity have so far come to light, but there are fears that more such errors could have been made, leaving families under a shadow of uncertainty.


Telegraph
5 minutes ago
- Telegraph
British teenager, 16, arrested after ‘sexually assaulting tourist'
Police have arrested a British 16-year-old after he allegedly tried to sexually assault another British tourist at her hotel in southern Tenerife. The teenager allegedly attempted to enter the 22-year-old's room at a hotel in Playa de Las Americas. Detectives said on Thursday that he fled after she resisted and screamed. He has been remanded to a juvenile detention centre following an appearance at a youth court and banned from leaving Spain pending an ongoing investigation. 'Busy, daylight hours' The incident happened during 'busy, daylight hours' on July 31, according to Spanish police. A spokesman in Tenerife said: 'Officers have arrested a minor, aged 16, as the alleged author of an attempted sex attack on July 31 at a hotel in the municipality of Arona. 'The quick work of officers led to his rapid location and arrest, preventing the possibility of further attacks. 'The incident occurred at the door of one of the rooms of the hotel where the victim, aged 22, was approached by an individual who managed to sneak in behind her. 'She resisted, screaming to raise the alarm, and managed to prevent the attacker from closing the door behind him who reacted by fleeing the scene. 'The attack happened in busy, daylight hours in a busy part of the hotel. CCTV cameras enabled the officers to reconstruct the events of that day and follow the suspect's movements so they could locate and arrest him at a hotel pool nearby. 'He was a guest there and on holiday with his family. The youngster was handed over to a youth court judge. 'Given the severity of the allegations against him, he was remanded to a youth detention centre where he will remain in custody, without being afforded the possibility of leaving the island.' 'On the prowl' A police source said: 'Both the teenage boy and the woman are British. She was holidaying alone and he was with his family.' Another source added: 'The CCTV images police obtained showed this lad appeared to be on the prowl after entering a hotel he wasn't staying at. 'He didn't know the older woman. She was a complete stranger.' It is currently unclear which hotel the alleged attack took place at.