
British teacher, 25, dies in China just 90 minutes after telling his mother how much he was looking forward to trip back to UK
The heartbroken mother of a young British teacher who died suddenly in China has said he passed away only minutes after speaking to her on the phone.
Bradley Hall, 25, had been working as a teacher near Shanghai for two years when he died suddenly on May 10.
Just an hour and a half before his death, Bradley, who studied law at Teesside University before switching to education, had been chatting happily with his mother, Lindsey Hall, about his upcoming trip back to home in Teeside.
His family has since been left in shock, with few answers and mounting bills to bring him home.
An autopsy in China was quoted at £3,000, despite the family having already signed paperwork for the procedure.
They are now fighting to bring his body back to the UK,with heartbroken mother, Ms Hall, 46, telling TeessideLive: 'I was talking to my son an hour and a half beforehand, chit chatting away.
'Then he rang back. I said "hiya son, alright?" but it was his friend to say he'd passed away.'
UK authorities have said a second post-mortem may still be required once his body is repatriated, according to Bradley's stepfather, Marc Henderson-Thynne, 56, who said information is very 'scarce' at the moment.
Bradley was described by his family as 'fit as a fiddle', a gym-goer, non-smoker, and devoted Middlesbrough FC fan.
Mr Henderson-Thynne said: 'He was fit, he trained, he didn't smoke, didn't drink. He was never in any trouble, he didn't like violence, he loved football and had a season ticket before.'
A GoFundMe campaign has now been launched to help cover repatriation costs, which are estimated at around £18,000.
The fundraiser said: 'Sadly, on May 10th, my 25-year-old nephew Bradley passed away suddenly while in China. I'm doing this just to make it a bit easier on his mam and dad.
'He was working out there as a teacher, as a family, we are absolutely devastated and heartbroken.
'We are working with the authorities here and in China to bring him home. As you will imagine this is not going to be cheap, and when he is home we need a funeral which a parent doesn't expect to have to do any donation will be amazing no matter how much any funds that are left after everything we will be donating to the Finley cooper foundation in Bradley's memory.'
So far, around £5,300 has been raised toward a £6,000 goal while the family is being charged £6 per day for his body to remain in a Chinese mortuary.
Bradley's aunt, Emma Henderson-Thynne, has been leading contact with the UK embassy and Chinese authorities on the family's behalf.
Bradley was planning to come visit his family in the UK in July, the first time since last summer, with his beloved mother preparing a parmo for his brief return.
His mother said: 'It feels like because he's not at home, I'm in a bubble. I know he's gone, but I'm still in this bubble.'
He had built a new life abroad with his girlfriend Joanna and their dog.
Despite ongoing efforts, the family remains without a confirmed timeline for Bradley's return.

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


BBC News
23 minutes ago
- BBC News
Newcastle City Council refers fraud investigation to police
An investigation into potential fraud at a council has been referred to the April, Newcastle City Council began investigating possible fraudulent activity within the council's transport local authority confirmed on Tuesday that the "financial irregularities", understood to relate to potential overclaiming involving an unconfirmed number of employees, had been passed onto Northumbria Police to look into force said it was currently reviewing the material. The council said the council's internal investigation into the allegations related to a section of the transport department, rather than any individuals in its corporate leadership team, according to the Local Democracy Reporting Service. Responsibility for transport issues will now sit with Christine Herriot, the Labour-run council's director of city operations, neighbourhoods and regulatory services, for the time centre officials also confirmed that, following the launch of the investigation earlier this year, it has had to pay to bring in external staff to assist with the running of a section of its transport department. It described this as "standard practice in instances where additional capacity is needed".Colin Ferguson, leader of the council's Liberal Democrat opposition, said that it was "absolutely right" that the concerns over financial irregularities had been referred to the police."The public deserves clarity on who knew what and when, and for how long this has been going on," he said."They have a right to know whether this could and should have been dealt with a long time ago." Follow BBC Newcastle on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram.


BreakingNews.ie
27 minutes ago
- BreakingNews.ie
Neo-Nazi teenager snared by MI5 as he tried to buy gun for attack, court told
A neo-Nazi teenager was snared by police and MI5 as he tried to buy a Makarov pistol for a terrorist attack, a court has heard. Alfie Coleman was detained by armed police in a Morrisons car park moments after he paid £3,500 in exchange for what he thought was a gun and ammunition, the Old Bailey was told. Advertisement It was the culmination of a 'highly sophisticated operation' in which an undercover officer from MI5 allegedly agreed to sell Coleman weaponry, jurors were told. Former Tesco worker Coleman had allegedly engaged in online chat with several undercover officers over months as he tried to buy the gun on various encrypted messaging platforms. Prosecutor Nicholas De La Poer KC said an arrangement was made with the undercover officer for the supply of a Makarov pistol, five magazines and 200 rounds of ammunition. Coleman was allegedly told they would be in a Land Rover Discovery parked in the Morrisons car park in Stratford, east London. Advertisement On the morning of September 29 2023, the defendant left £3,500 in cash in the front passenger seat footwell and collected the bag of items from the boot. But before he had gone 30 yards, he was confronted by armed counter-terrorism police and arrested, the court was told. Inside the bag he was carrying was what appeared to be a handgun and around 200 rounds of ammunition, jurors heard. Mr De La Poer said members of the public going about their business shopping at Morrisons had witnessed the 'shocking scene' as Coleman was detained by three counter-terrorism officers pointing stun guns. Advertisement He said: 'There was much shouting at the young man. More men appeared and took hold of the young man who ended up on the ground.' While planning a gun attack, the defendant had gathered terrorist information, carried out online research, and wrote a 'manifesto', jurors were told. Mr De La Poer told jurors: 'The prosecution's case is that Mr Coleman believed in an extreme right-wing ideology which included idolising the likes of Thomas Mair, the man who murdered the MP, Jo Cox.' He believed in the 'the supremacy of white people and neo-Nazism' and collected a number of documents to help with his attack planning, the prosecutor said. Advertisement He went on: 'The prosecution's case is that Mr Coleman engaged in conversation on encrypted social media platforms such as Wire and Telegram with people whom he thought were sympathetic to his views. 'And it was through such people that Mr Coleman sought to buy firearms. A mission which led him to the Morrison's carpark in Stratford on the morning of September 29 2023.' The court heard how the defendant had emailed the far-right white supremacist organisation Patriotic Alternative in July 2021 saying he 'would like to start participating in activism'. In June 2022, the defendant allegedly wrote a plan for a potential terrorist attack identifying his initial target as the 'Mayor of London house' and included the postcode of the Lord Mayor of London. Advertisement The note also made reference to what appeared to be a plan to put explosive in a cash machine and listed weapons including knives and crossbows, the court was told. In the event, the plans were abandoned as his thinking developed, jurors heard. Jurors were told of file entitled 'you can't see me' containing another attack plan, this time to hijack a plane. Mr De La Poer said that in the 'cold light of day' this plan appeared to be 'far-fetched and childish'. Jurors were told that Coleman accepted that he had a significant quantity of extreme right-wing material and had pleaded guilty to possessing 10 documents which contain information likely to be useful to terrorists. The defendant did not dispute writing a text bearing similarities to other 'manifestos' written by convicted extreme right-wing terrorists nor that he engaged in chat on Telegram and Wire with people who proclaimed extreme right-wing views and idolised Hitler, jurors heard. Coleman has also pleaded guilty to attempting to possess both a firearm and ammunition but denied he was preparing for a terrorist attack. Mr De La Poer said the defendant would claim he did not agree with everything he read and was always changing what he thought. The defendant had dismissed the manifesto and online chat as a 'fantasy' and claimed he wanted a gun and ammunition because he thought that the breakdown of society was coming. Coleman, now aged 21, of Great Notley in Essex, has denied preparing acts of terrorism and the trial continues.


Daily Mail
33 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Labour accused of 'cover up' over 'rampant' abuse of asylum system by foreign students
Labour has been accused of covering up the full extent of a 'backdoor to Britain' which allows foreign students to claim asylum here. Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp said there is 'rampant' abuse by those granted a temporary student visas who then go on to claim they are a refugee in a bid to stay in the UK permanently. The Conservative frontbencher asked the Home Office to reveal new figures on the numbers making such claims, after the Mail revealed last year that nearly 5,000 foreign students claimed asylum in the year to March 2023. But the Home Office has so far refused to disclose the latest numbers. Mr Philp said: 'The Labour Government is covering up the rampant abuse of the system and refusing to publish the information regarding the number of asylum claims coming from international students registered at UK institutions. 'This is not good enough – they must come clean and start revoking sponsoring licences from non-compliant organisations. 'High-quality international students are welcome in the UK but too many institutions are selling immigration, not education.' Mr Philp asked the Home Secretary in a parliamentary question 'if she will publish the number people who came to the UK on a study visa and later claimed asylum for each sponsoring institution'. In a written reply, immigration minister Seema Malhotra said: 'The Immigration White Paper, published on May 12, sets out proposals for reform in a wide range of areas, including student visas, further details of which will be set out in due course.' In April last year the Mail exclusively revealed how leaked documents – covering the year to March 2023 – showed a record 21,525 asylum claims were made by visa holders, a 154 per cent annual rise. Of those, 4,965 arrived as students, 5,648 applications came on a visitor's visa and another 2,240 were made by seasonal workers. It also emerged at the time that education agency Study Group UK had sponsored visas for 804 foreign students who later claimed asylum. Study Group's website describes it as a 'leading international education specialist and a trusted strategic partner to more than 50 universities around the world'. The company was placed on a 'compliance action plan' by the Home Office in late 2024, which is understood to have been designed to address the high levels of non-compliance among its students. But it was taken off the special measures at the end of March this year. The firm remains licensed to sponsor student visas and is recruiting for new students ahead of the start of the academic year in the autumn. The university and higher education sector has raised concerns that poor compliance by some firms poses a risk to their businesses. One higher education executive said: 'There are regulations in place, but they are not being enforced. 'One bad actor is risking the credibility of the entire student visa system.' A Study Group spokesman said: 'The continued media focus on Study Group is disappointing, not least when we have consistently rebutted any claims and investigations into various areas of compliance. 'The Daily Mail article in April 2024 referenced historic asylum data from the year to March 2022-2023. 'As clarified with you last year, immediate measures were taken to address the anomalous spike in asylum applications from one particular country. This action was effective, and the following year claims fell by 90 per cent. 'We do not support any intent to use education as a route to asylum and take our commitment to compliance with UK immigration and asylum policy extremely seriously.' He said details of the action plan 'remain confidential', but added that 'no reference was made to asylum claims, hence no specific steps were required to be taken in that regard'. 'We continuously review and improve our processes, driving enhancements to ensure we continue to meet the highest standards of compliance,' the spokesman said. A Home Office spokesman said: 'Under successive governments we have seen a growing trend of the UK's student visa system being undermined, both by individuals from overseas seeking to exploit it, and by education providers in this country failing to protect it. 'We have acted quickly to tackle it, building intelligence on the profile of these individuals to identify them earlier and faster. This intelligence will help us stamp out this abuse and protect the integrity of our immigration system.'