logo
Silhouettes at country park represent road victims

Silhouettes at country park represent road victims

Yahoo17-05-2025

A poignant temporary memorial has been installed at a country park for visitors who want to remember those who lost their lives or were injured in road crashes.
The display at Irchester Country Park includes 32 silhouettes, representing the number of people killed on Northamptonshire's roads in 2024.
There are also doves and flags to represent those who received serious or minor injuries.
The police officer who came up with the idea lost her own mother in a collision in 2013.
PC Emilie Bunkall's mum Julie died in 2013 on the A6 near Burton Latimer.
An inquest heard it was likely the woman driving the other car had some kind of blackout.
PC Bunkall thought at the time she would be unable to carry on her policing career following the death, but continued because her mother was "incredibly proud of my traffic role".
As well as the silhouettes, the display at Irchester, that was created with the help of PC Bunkall's sister, contains 243 doves that represent someone who sustained a serious injury.
There are also 1,360 county flags, signifying those who received minor injuries.
It took more than eight hours over two days to install the objects alongside floral bouquets provided by a Northampton florist.
It is the fourth year PC Bunkall has arranged a memorial.
She said the reaction from victims' relatives to last year's display at Abington Park in Northampton was "very emotional".
She said: "I wonder each year whether the display is still impactful. However, while we were setting up the display, we had lots of positive interactions with the public - many of whom didn't realise the numbers involved.
"One teenager walked past and said 'that's a lot of people!'"
The memorial will be in place for a fortnight and relatives can collect the silhouette representing their loved one from PC Bunkall after the display has been removed.
Follow Northamptonshire news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.
Road safety truck named after crash victim
Petition launched after six road deaths in a decade
Woman blacked-out in fatal collision
Northamptonshire Police
Roadpeace

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Israel launches strikes on weapons in Syria
Israel launches strikes on weapons in Syria

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Israel launches strikes on weapons in Syria

Israel said it had launched strikes on weapons belonging to Syria, hours after reports that two projectiles had been fired from Syria into Israel on Tuesday. The Israeli strikes on southern Syria caused "significant human and material losses", Syria's foreign ministry said, adding that Israel was "trying to destabilise the region". Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz said he held Syrian interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa responsible for the projectiles launched into Israel. Despite recent indirect talks to ease tensions between the two countries, Israel has stepped up attacks on targets in Syria since Sharaa led a rebel offensive that overthrew Bashar al-Assad's regime in December 2024. "Violent explosions shook southern Syria, notably the town of Quneitra and the Daraa region, following Israeli aerial strikes," said the Syrian Observatory of Human Rights, a UK-based monitoring group. In a statement, Syria's foreign ministry said: "This escalation constitutes a blatant violation of Syrian sovereignty and aggravates tensions in the region. "Syria has never been and will never be a threat to anyone in the region." It was unclear how many people were killed or injured in Israel's strikes. Israel said the strikes came after two projectiles launched from Syria landed in open areas of the country, causing no injuries. Israeli media reported that the strikes were the first launched from Syria since the fall of the Bashar al-Assad regime. It was not immediately clear who fired the projectiles. "We consider the president of Syria directly responsible for any threat and fire toward the State of Israel," Katz said. Syria's foreign ministry said reports of the launches from inside Syria "have not been verified yet". When the Assad regime was deposed, Israel launched a wave of attacks to degrade Syrian military infrastructure. It has also encouraged the expansion of settlements in the occupied Golan Heights, territory which Israel seized from Syria in 1976 and is considered illegally occupied under international law. Last month, US President Donald Trump announced plans to lift decade-old sanctions on Syria, imposed in response to atrocities committed by forces loyal to Assad during a 13-year civil war. During that conflict, more than 600,000 people were killed and 12 million others were forced from their homes. Last month, Israel bombed an area near Syria's presidential palace in Damascus, a strike which Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said was a "clear message" that it would "not allow the deployment of forces south of Damascus". UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said the bombing was a "violation of Syria's sovereignty".

British journalist missing in Brazil found safe
British journalist missing in Brazil found safe

Yahoo

time15 hours ago

  • Yahoo

British journalist missing in Brazil found safe

A British journalist reported missing in Brazil since February has been found safe and well, police have said. Charlotte Alice Peet, 32, was reported missing to authorities by her UK-based family after losing contact with her in February. At time the Association of Foreign Press Correspondents in Brazil (ACIE) released a statement "expressing concern over her disappearance". On Monday, Brazilian police told the BBC they had found Ms Peet in a hostel in São Paulo in March and she expressed a desire not to have contact with family members. "In view of this, the investigation of the disappearance was concluded," a spokesperson for Rio state's Civil Police said. At the time of her disappearance, Ms Peet was understood to have last contacted a friend on 8 February, saying she was in São Paulo and planned to travel to Rio de Janeiro. She had not been heard from since. Days later, her UK-based family told the friend they had lost contact with her and provided authorities with details of her flight and a copy of her passport to aid the search. According to her LinkedIn profile, Ms Peet has worked as a freelance journalist in Rio and London for organisations including Al Jazeera and The Times.

Deported Albanian drug dealer who returned illegally can stay in UK
Deported Albanian drug dealer who returned illegally can stay in UK

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

Deported Albanian drug dealer who returned illegally can stay in UK

An Albanian drug dealer who returned to the UK after being deported for drug offences has been allowed to remain in Britain despite having committed further crimes. Stiljano Ziu was jailed for nine months after being convicted of producing cannabis but was released early on condition that he agreed not to return after being deported. In breach of his deportation, he returned and married a Greek national resident in the UK, on the basis of which he claimed the right to remain in the UK. He was backed by a lower and upper immigration tribunal, on the basis that he was not a threat to the public, despite an appeal by the Home Office who said he had shown 'blatant disregard' for the immigration controls. However, Ziu was subsequently convicted of drug dealing, which means he faces the prospect of deportation for a second time. The case, disclosed in court papers, is the latest example uncovered by The Telegraph where illegal migrants or convicted foreign criminals have been able to remain in the UK or halt their deportations on human rights grounds. Yvette Cooper, the Home Secretary, has announced plans to curb judges' powers to block deportations with new legally-enforced 'common sense' rules to clarify how judges interpret human rights laws and strengthen the public interest test. The court was told Ziu entered the UK unlawfully in 2017 or 2018. In November 2018 he was convicted of offences involving the production of cannabis and sentenced to nine months' imprisonment. He was deported the following month. However, he illegally re-entered Britain in early 2019 and just before Christmas 2020 he applied for a residence card as the spouse of a Greek national exercising treaty rights to stay in the UK. They married in April 2021. The application was refused but he successfully appealed to a first tier tribunal which noted that his unlawful entry to the UK was four years ago. It found in his favour on the basis that it could not 'be satisfied that there is a 'present' threat to the integrity of the immigration system in the circumstances.' The Home Office appealed, arguing that he posed a 'genuine, present and sufficiently serious threat' to the public and that deportation was proportionate. It noted that his period of residence in the UK was limited and he had started a relationship with his wife at a time when he had entered the UK in breach of a deportation order. 'His familial links were insufficient to establish integration in the UK and his ability to reintegrate into Albania, his country of origin, was realistic,' the Home Office told the court. Ziu was, at the time of the appeal, facing trial for drug producing and dealing but the court said an impending prosecution did not automatically disqualify him from the right to stay as he could be proved innocent. The upper tribunal dismissed the Home Office appeal. 'We find that the Secretary of State has failed to show that the first-tier tribunal erred in law and we dismiss the Secretary of State's appeal,' the judge declared. However, Ziu was convicted in November and jailed for four-and-a-half years for two counts of conspiring to supply Class B drugs. The judge said: 'What happens next is of course a matter for the Secretary of State. However, the claimant must understand that his recent conviction has resulted in a sentence that may require his deportation from the United Kingdom and that is something the Secretary of State will consider. It may be that this case has been an academic exercise.' Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store