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UK inquiry seeks answers over Southport girls' murders

UK inquiry seeks answers over Southport girls' murders

Reuters08-07-2025
LONDON, July 8 (Reuters) - A public inquiry into the murders of three young girls at a Taylor Swift-themed dance event in Southport in Britain last year begins on Tuesday, seeking to determine whether the rampage could have been prevented and how to stop any similar atrocity.
Teenager Axel Rudakubana, who was obsessed with violence and genocide, launched the knife attack at the summer vacation event in northern England last July, killing the girls and wounding another 10.
The incident shocked the nation and was followed by days of nationwide rioting.
Just 17 at the time of the attack, Rudakubana was jailed in January for at least 52 years after he admitted the offences just as his trial was about to start. Prosecutors said his motive was not clear and it appeared to be simply the desire to commit mass murder.
After the conviction, Prime Minister Keir Starmer ordered the inquiry into state failings as it emerged in the trial that Rudakubana had been referred to a counter-radicalisation scheme three times, but no action had been taken.
Rudakubana had been involved in previous troubling incidents where he had been arrested carrying a knife. He had also admitted possessing an al Qaeda training manual and producing the lethal poison ricin.
"My focus throughout this inquiry will be a thorough and forensic investigation of all the circumstances surrounding the attack and the events leading up to it," the inquiry chair, Adrian Fulford, said in a statement.
The inquiry will begin by looking at the teenager's history and involvement with public bodies, before a second phase examines the wider issue of children being drawn into violence, an increasing concern for British authorities.
Lawyers for the three murdered girls - Bebe King, six, Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, and Alice Dasilva Aguiar, nine - said they hoped it would uncover the truth.
"We know that nothing the inquiry reveals, or subsequently recommends will change the unimaginable loss felt by the families of Elsie, Alice and Bebe, but we all now have a responsibility to ensure that something like this never happens again," they said in a statement.
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Proof that Starmer's 'smash the gangs' campaign is a joke: Small boat migrant tally hits 25,000 in record time
Proof that Starmer's 'smash the gangs' campaign is a joke: Small boat migrant tally hits 25,000 in record time

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time28 minutes ago

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Proof that Starmer's 'smash the gangs' campaign is a joke: Small boat migrant tally hits 25,000 in record time

Keir Starmer 's pledge to 'smash the gangs' was in tatters on Thursday night after a new record was set for Channel crossings. More than 25,000 migrants have now arrived in the UK in small boats this year, the earliest the milestone has been hit. Nearly 900 migrants arrived in Dover from northern France on Wednesday, bringing the total for 2025 so far to 25,436, Home Office figures show. The record figure, represents a rise of more than 50 per cent on 2024, prompted demands for Labour to declare a 'national emergency'. One of the Prime Minister's first acts after winning power was to scrap the Conservatives ' Rwanda scheme, which was designed to deter migrants from risking the dangerous journey. A pilot for his 'one in, one out' migrant returns deal with France's President Macron - signed last month - has not yet begun. The scheme is expected to initially see just 50 Channel migrants a week swapped with asylum seekers already in France. Reform UK leader Nigel Farage told the Mail: 'Starmer promised to smash the gangs, but all he's smashing is illegal immigration records instead. It will only get worse.' Chris Philp, Shadow Home Secretary, added: '2025 is the worst year on record so far and the Labour Government are doing nothing to stop the crossings. This is now a national emergency. 'Their 17 in one out deal with France will not even make a dent - it would take ten years for Yvette Cooper to deport the illegal immigrants that have arrived since the start of this year alone under her so-called deal which still hasn't started. 'The Conservative Party's Deportation Bill would bring this circus to an end. We would detain illegal arrivals on the spot, deport them without delay. If the ECHR stands in our way, we will leave it.' In 2024, the 25,000 mark was passed on September 22 and in 2023 it was even later, on October 2. 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Extra bobbies on beat reduce knife crime by up to 25pc, says Cooper
Extra bobbies on beat reduce knife crime by up to 25pc, says Cooper

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time28 minutes ago

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Extra bobbies on beat reduce knife crime by up to 25pc, says Cooper

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Could Ian Brady's missing memoir help solve the Moors Murders mystery?
Could Ian Brady's missing memoir help solve the Moors Murders mystery?

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The main anguished question left unanswered by the so-called Moors murderers is, of course: Where is the body of 12-year-old Keith Bennett? Many articles, books and documentaries have agonised over this mystery for decades but it is rare that one unearths something genuinely new and which points, 60 years after he was killed, to a solid clue. The Moors Murders: A Search for Justice (BBC2) may just have found, if not a smoking gun, a strong signpost. The second and final episode of this conscientious, unsensationalist series reveals that the film-maker and journalist Duncan Staff has unearthed Ian Brady's secret typewritten autobiography — which Brady grandly called 'Black Light' — in which he describes the planning, murder and hasty burial of his and Myra Hindley's first victim, Pauline Reade, in 1963, including counting out the paces from her grave. This document could be the guide to where Keith is buried on Saddleworth Moor — though frustratingly it stops abruptly before getting to him. There are 200 pages missing. But they must, Staff reasons, be somewhere. Astonishingly, the pages that Staff has been given have laid hidden for years, with the police seemingly unaware of their existence. Staff believes the missing ones may have been deposited with Brady's solicitor. Hours before Brady's death in 2017 he asked for locked suitcases of papers in his room to be handed to Robin Makin, his solicitor. Police and members of the victims' families have requested access to it but this has been denied. Makin did not respond to the film-makers' request for information about the autobiography, said a statement. Bennett was one of Brady and Hindley's five victims PA Perhaps even more astonishingly, when Staff presented his findings to Greater Manchester Police it was at first interested but then appeared to have a change of heart. In the past, searches on the moors have proved very expensive, though this was not cited as a reason. 'We will carefully consider and respond, in a timely and professional manner, to any credible evidence shared with us that may lead us towards finding Keith,' said a statement. I'm no expert but Staff's findings seem very credible. Staff has been given access to a trove of Brady's documents and tape recordings of his voice held by Brady's confidant, the former religious studies teacher Dr Alan Keightley. Though it feels soiling to hear Brady's self-pitying, foul-mouthed whingeing (he even calls his own solicitors 'c***s') that he is allowed only a 'f***ing typewriter'. This film is not interested in raking over the gruesome details of the torture, rape and murder of their young victims, which, depressingly, are all too familiar. Instead it examines the possibility of harnessing new technology — GPS, drones, analysis of Brady's photographs and 3D scanning of the landscape — perhaps finally to bring closure of sorts for Keith's family. (His mother, Winnie Johnson, was buried with his little spectacles — all that she had left of him.) Of course Brady was a calculating psychopath. It is quite possible he deliberately removed the pages to play mind games from the grave with those still seeking Keith's body, the last power card he had to play. Maybe they don't exist; maybe he destroyed them, relishing sending people on a wild goose chase after his death. But as someone said, this is a social matter now as much as a criminal one. This mystery needs to be solved and this child laid to rest, and if there is a chance these pages can help with that, then surely it's worth a shot. ★★★★☆ Love TV? Discover the best shows on Netflix, the best Prime Video TV shows, the best Disney+ shows, the best Apple TV+ shows, the best shows on BBC iPlayer, the best shows on Sky and Now, the , the best shows on Channel 4 streaming, the best shows on Paramount+ and our favourite hidden gem TV shows what to watch this week TV guide

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