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Teen planned Southport-style attacks on dance school and Oasis gig
Teen planned Southport-style attacks on dance school and Oasis gig

Times

time13-07-2025

  • Times

Teen planned Southport-style attacks on dance school and Oasis gig

A boy aged 17 planned to attack fans at the first Oasis reunion concert and carry out a Southport-style atrocity at a dance school near his home, a court has been told. The teenager, who cannot be named because of his age, allegedly researched how to obtain large knives and in a chat with a friend sent an image of one for sale online, saying: 'Would this work?' He also told friends of a plan to attack the Oasis gig on July 4 in Cardiff, the prosecution said. A note saved on his phone headed 'places to attack' included a dance school near his home, and that location data suggested he had been close to it a few days earlier. The teenager had also researched his own school as a potential target, the court was told. After his family raised concerns, the teenager had an appointment with a counsellor on June 2 during which he said he planned to commit a 'Rudakubana-style attack'. Axel Rudakubana was also 17 when he killed three girls aged six, seven and nine during a knife attack on a Taylor Swift-themed dance class in July last year. An inquiry into the killings opened last week. • Southport inquiry told of girl's heroics: 'I'm glad I could help, Mum' The prosecution in the latest case told a court that no evidence was found that the youth, from near Cwmbran in South Wales, had an ideology that would fit the legal definition of terrorism. Under the Terrorism Act 2000 the use or threat of violence must be for the purpose of advancing a political, religious, racial or ideological cause. Targeting schools and misogynistic or incel (involuntary celibate) attacks or those motivated by nihilism or self-aggrandisement are not considered terrorist offences. That means that the 17-year-old suspect cannot be charged with preparing an attack. Instead he was charged with, and has admitted, a single charge of possessing a document useful for terrorism — an offence for which Rudakubana received an 18-month sentence. In total the killer was jailed for a minimum of 52 years in January. The prosecution said the Welsh teenager's Snapchat account used a misspelt version of Rudakubana's name and he had researched the killer, saving images of him with words added that mocked Southport victims. The boy had participated in discussions with other teenagers on Snapchat in which he praised Rudakubana and said he wanted to participate in a similar terrorist-style attack. One of the people he was talking to on Snapchat reported him to the police. In one chat the youth said he had tried to make ricin — a poison manufactured by Rudakubana — although he later told officers this was not true. The teenager had praised Rudakubana in his appointment with a counsellor, leading to a second report to the police. At about 10.30am on the day of the appointment he researched knives and transferred an al-Qaeda training manual between phones. The youth accepts that he had a copy of the same 188-page document found in the possession of the Southport killer. He appeared at Westminster magistrates' court on June 21. The judge, Mrs Justice Cheema-Grubb, ordered a pre-sentence report and asked that it should consider dangerousness. She also asked for a psychiatric report on the defendant. The press applied to have restrictions on naming the defendant lifted. The case was committed to crown court for sentence at a date to be determined.

Dancing king? That's him (not me)
Dancing king? That's him (not me)

Times

time10-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Times

Dancing king? That's him (not me)

It's a warm Wednesday evening and I'm in a dance studio in central London, focused entirely on moving my body to the opening bars of Wannabe by the Spice Girls. I strut forward. I freeze. I jiggle my hips. I freeze again. I shimmy to the right, move my hands coyly yet alluringly over my face and torso, then shimmy to the left, do a spin before — and this is the bit I've been really struggling with — going on to my tiptoes, moving my knees together and thrusting my groin in time to the 'zig-a-zig-ahhhh'. I can no longer remember how many times I've been through this short routine. Ten? Twelve? A million? I'm very tired. My left calf is shaking and twitching like a nervous pet and I'm sweating so much that, glancing at myself in the studio's mirrored wall, I look like a jogger who has fallen into a canal. Fortunately, none of the 40 or so middle-aged women around me seem to notice or care. There is only one man commanding their attention, and it is the diminutive Brazilian in a Spice Girls T-shirt, baseball cap and very short shorts who is leading the class. He moves before us with the kind of snappy, sassy physicality I now yearn to possess, and we attempt to mirror his every step and sashay. He sings along to the lyrics with a faint lisp. He goes on his tiptoes, moves his knees together and rapidly thrusts his groin. 'Thig-a-thig-ahhhh,' he cries, his face ecstatic. The music stops. The room goes wild. His name is Justin Neto. He is a celebrity choreographer with more than six million followers across social media, but more than that, he is a sort of sociological phenomenon. Women — and I cannot stress this enough — absolutely love him, but particularly women in their mid-forties and beyond, who flock to the classes he runs in Rio and New York City. That he is, for the very first time, in London to offer a week of classes at $60 (£44) a ticket is incredibly exciting. One woman, Emma, has come all the way from Blackpool to be here tonight. 'I'd follow him on tour around the world if I could,' she says, breathless and endorphin-sozzled. She had seen clips of him teaching classes on her teenage daughter's Instagram and was immediately drawn to him. 'He's fun. He's energetic.' Alexia is a 55-year-old who lives in New York and attends his classes there, but is visiting London so thought she'd do a class here too. 'He's like an injection of joy!' she says. 'It's escapism. And for a menopausal woman, having to learn all the moves has been a huge help for my brain.' Two sisters, Anna and Pippa, love that Neto plays 'our music, Eighties music'. Back on the dancefloor, a woman in a vest that reads 'No pain, no champagne' absolutely throws herself into the Footloose routine. Having spent much of my twenties as the only person on the dancefloor not on MDMA, tonight, in my forties, I am one of the few people not on HRT. There is only one other man present. What you doing here, I ask? 'Date night,' he says, nodding towards his wife. 'Her choice.' She smiles and thumps him affectionately. • Read more expert advice on healthy living, fitness and wellbeing Neto admits that he is still coming to terms with his rise to stardom. For all his exuberance as a teacher he is, in person, thoughtful and reflective. Growing up in the Brazilian city of Joao Pessoa, he had been a 'shy, insecure' choirboy. But the first time he saw the video to Britney Spears' …Baby One More Time his entire world changed. He pestered his mother to buy him her CD, attempting to convince her that Spears was a godly, gospel singer, and does a very good impression of his mother looking at him sideways with suspicion. But the main thing is he wangled the CD. 'Britney Spears was my No 1 diva, my first dance teacher ever,' he says, describing how, when he had the family apartment to himself, he would practise Britney's moves in the living room for hours and hours. His shyness and insecurity gradually left him. One day his father came home early and caught him. He shouted at his son, telling him that what he was doing was wrong. ''No!' I told him,' Neto says, chin thrust upwards. ''It is not wrong!'' And that was that. He became a choreographer and, after a brief false start hosting a show on Brazilian cable TV, found himself in New York teaching dance classes, but not attracting as many students as he would have liked. For his final class of 2020, he encouraged everyone to come and, rather than doing a strict, technique-heavy choreography session, they would dress up in festive clothes and have a laugh dancing to Mariah Carey's All I Want for Christmas Is You. He posted the video online with no expectations. 'And it went viral!' he says, eyes wide. Similar videos followed, and did even bigger numbers. 'I had comments in Japanese. I never got comments in Japanese before.' • Dance for 20 minutes a day 'to hit weekly exercise target' Looking back, the appeal was not hard to understand. In a world emerging from a pandemic slump, there was something potent and magnetic about the carefree communality of it all, groups of people being joyous and active and in close proximity. Over the past decade social media has changed the nature of choreography, with online tutorials allowing people to practise and repeat the moves they see, but also by placing a greater premium on the projection of personality rather than perfect technique. This all worked to Neto's advantage. His classes swelled, particularly with women who might previously have felt intimidated. And when these women began appearing in his clips, they only helped to attract more fans. 'Because in the videos it was mostly middle-aged women and women who look like me,' a woman in bright trainers called Claire tells me. 'It's like a huge group-hug experience that only women really get. Men in middle age need to conquer a 'personal best' challenge, like a triathlon or marathon. Women need to get together in groups to laugh and hold each other up. And that's just what Justin's classes do.' • I learnt to twerk like Meghan Markle Neto, for his part, is alive to this fact. He is protective of the women who come to his classes, and while he stresses that he is not a therapist — 'If you need therapy, get therapy!' — he is touchingly in-tune with his clientele. 'When you're crossing your forties and moving into your fifties, your mind has a lot of things to manage, and there can be lots of changes coming and lots of everyday stress,' he says. Some women place a huge amount of pressure on themselves at this stage of life. 'So the music, the sound, the vibration is a good way to heal some of those expectations. It's an environment with no judgment.' The class finishes with a huge blow-out to It's Raining Men. There are hugs and high-fives, and people queue for selfies with Neto. He teaches more than a dozen classes a week and though he says he needs to slow down to save his knees and back, I'm not sure his fans will let him. There are just too many happy, red-faced women floating into the night. 'I think,' he says quietly, after they have gone, 'that I have found my mission.'

The photo of Axel Rudakubana which Southport victims' families want banned
The photo of Axel Rudakubana which Southport victims' families want banned

Yahoo

time09-07-2025

  • Yahoo

The photo of Axel Rudakubana which Southport victims' families want banned

The families of the Southport victims have called on the mugshot of killer Axel Rudakubana to never be shown again. On Tuesday the public inquiry into the murders of three girls at a Southport dance class opened, with chairman Sir Adrian Fulford describing the attack as 'one of the most egregious crimes in our country's history'. Fulford, a former vice-president of the Court of Appeal, said 'ordinary language fails to reflect the enormity' of the knife attack on the Taylor Swift-themed dance class on 29 July last year, when Rudakubana murdered Alice da Silva Aguiar, nine, Bebe King, six, and Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven. The 18-year-old, who was given a life sentence in January with a minimum term of 52 years, also attempted to murder eight other children, who cannot be named for legal reasons, as well as instructor Leanne Lucas and businessman John Hayes. One of the most chilling pictures from the trial was the mugshot of Rudakubana, which featured across newspapers and television following his jailing. But now, Fulford has called for the picture to be banned, saying that families found it 'significantly re-traumatising' whenever it is shown. Speaking at Liverpool town hall, Fulford called on the media to stop using the photo of Rudakubana taken after his arrest, having been 'routinely used for reporting on the attack itself and in stories regarding the perpetrator's conduct in prison'. Fulford said he had speaking with the surviving victims and their families, who find the picture 'a terrifying and singularly distressing image'. He told the inquiry: 'Indeed, seeing the face of the perpetrator, often without any warning, has the potential to be significantly re-traumatising. 'Every time this unsettling image is re-posted or re-broadcast, those responsible take on themselves the risk of causing real distress, thereby disrupting the process of rebuilding broken lives.:' Fulford urged the media to stop using the photo in question, arguing that it 'serves no credible journalistic purpose and only causes harm'. He added: 'I therefore urge all media outlets – traditional print and broadcast media, and those responsible for online reporting and on social media - to refrain from using it when reporting on our proceedings.' Mugshots are typically taken when someone is arrested and processed at a police station but are not routinely released to the public. They may be disclosed during active police investigations, such as when authorities seek public help to identify a suspect or locate a wanted individual, often shared via media or online appeals. However, in high-profile cases particularly, mugshots are usually released after someone is convicted if deemed in the public interest. Media outlets can request mugshots under specific circumstances, but police forces follow strict guidelines, and they are not automatically released. Home secretary Yvette Cooper announced the public inquiry in January to help understand what went wrong and prevent any repetition of similar incidents. Three separate referrals were made to the government's counter-terror programme Prevent about Rudakubana's behaviour in the years before the attack, as well as six separate calls to police. A review into the Prevent referrals published in February found there was sufficient risk posed by Rudakubana to keep his cases within Prevent active but that these were closed prematurely while too much focus was placed on a lack of distinct ideology. A key question for the inquiry is whether the attack could or should have been prevented, given what was known about the killer. Fulford set out the aims of the inquiry on Tuesday, saying his focus will be 'a thorough and forensic investigation of all the circumstances surrounding the attack and the events leading up to it'. Rudakubana's history and interactions with all the relevant agencies, how they shared information and responded to the risks that he posed will also be looked into. The second phase will take place next year, where Fulford will 'consider the wider issues of children and young people being drawn into extreme violence'. The widespread rioting and civil unrest following the murders is not being examined by the inquiry. Watch: Public inquiry begins into 'horrific' Southport murders

'Life is not like it was before,' father of girl injured in Southport attack tells inquiry
'Life is not like it was before,' father of girl injured in Southport attack tells inquiry

BBC News

time09-07-2025

  • BBC News

'Life is not like it was before,' father of girl injured in Southport attack tells inquiry

Update: Date: 12:37 BST Title: What we heard at the Southport inquiry today Content: This morning we heard from four families whose children were injured in the Southport attack last summer. It marked day two of an inquiry into what happened leading up to the attack on a Taylor Swift-themed dance class on Hart Street. The families' identities will be protected throughout the inquiry and reporting restrictions mean we cannot share the children's identities or those of their family members. The families read out their witness statements from Liverpool Town Hall: Update: Date: 12:17 BST Title: Hearings formally adjourned until September but lawyers will continue working Content: Judith MoritzReporting from the inquiry Nicholas Moss KC tells the hearing room that, although the hearings are now paused for a summer break, it does not mean that work behind the scenes will stop during July and August. Lawyers for all of the various organisations and individuals ('Core Participants') are all involved in the process of disclosing information to the inquiry and this work continues. Inquiry chair Sir Adrian Fulford formally adjourns the hearings until 8 September. Update: Date: 12:14 BST Title: Families praised for courage in giving statements Content: Judith MoritzReporting from the inquiry Counsel to the inquiry, Nicholas Moss KC, praises "the immense courage and dignity' it's taken all of the parents who have prepared statements so far. He explains that the 'impact and commemorative' evidence will continue when the inquiry resumes on 8 September. More parents will address the inquiry then - laying bare the incalculable impact that the attack has had on all of their lives. There will also be commemorative statements about the three little girls who were murdered. These inquiry proceedings also act as the inquest process for those children. Update: Date: 12:11 BST Title: Mother of child C1 was in tears throughout statement Content: Judith MoritzReporting from the inquiry The mother of child C1 was in tears throughout her delivery of the statement but she kept going. She has now finished reading her witness statement. Update: Date: 12:10 BST Title: 'Our girls deserve and apology' and a promise changes will be made, says mum of child C1 Content: Jonny HumphriesReporting from the inquiry The mother of child C1 says she finds it "unbearable" sometimes to listen to her daughter's innocent thoughts around the perpetrator and attacks. She hasn't found the words for these conversations, she explains, but she is "terrified" that when her daughter learns of the findings of the inquiry that it will be "earth-shattering for her and we will have to begin her recovery again". "We are trying to shield her as much as possible whilst we understand this ourselves. She has every right to ask these questions. This inquiry must answer them. She deserves the truth, she deserves accountability. She deserves an girls deserve an apology." She says the apology needs to come with the promise changes will be made and this won't happen again. Child C1's parents say they are proud of her steady progress as they "continue to try and rebuild" their lives. "We are under no illusion though, that she and our family are forever changed by last year and will be managing the consequences of it for our lifetime. "To all of the girls: make the friendship bracelets, take the moment and taste it — because you have every right to. We are all right here with you as you learn how to survive this. We will draw stars around your scars. And to my darling daughter: you are pure magic, we are so proud of you, and we love you so much." Update: Date: 12:08 BST Title: Child C1 asks parents how someone could carry out such attack Content: Judith MoritzReporting from the inquiry The mother of child C1 continues: "Despite what she carries, she manages to show incredible empathy and so much maturity in her thoughts of what happened that day. "She asks about the other girls and how everyone is coping. She tells me it's not my fault that she was there, and that she knows I'd just tried to plan something nice. "It completely shatters me to hear that. "She tries to understand how someone could do this, to children? It has been a living nightmare to support her through her thoughts and feelings of the person that did this. "Some days she is able to hold so much empathy and space for what he perhaps was feeling or went through. What his life may have been like to do this. "'Did he have friends? Were people not kind to him?,' she asks me, confused, 'Could he not talk to his parents if he had big feelings. Why did no one help him?' 'How did he get the knife? Did his parents know? Why didn't he get stopped? Did the police know?'" "I am left to parent her through questions with impossibly difficult answers.' Update: Date: 12:05 BST Title: 'Her body was stolen from her', mum of child C1 tells inquiry Content: Jonny HumphriesReporting from the inquiry The mother of Child C1 continues, and tells the inquiry that every day her daughter needs "an enormous amount of support" to do normal things. "In the shops we have to avoid the news section for fear of his face, or other images being on the front pages again. There is no respite. "The other day I even had to look online about references to knives or sharp objects in a children's film she wanted to watch at the cinema." She explains they have removed pointed knives from their home, but they still don't use the blunt tip ones, they have to replace them. "Life is full of constant triggers that we try to protect her and ourselves, from. She recalls the noise the knife made and the force that felt like punching. Her body shudders sporadically through the day and she looks at me. I know that she's having a flashback and feeling it all over again. She does this often when she looks at her scars. "Her scars are painful reminders of how brutally her body was violated. I sometimes tell her that, to me, her scars represent strength and how hard she fought to get back to us. I tell her that one day, she might look at them and feel the same. Proud of her actions that day. She disagrees. And I deep down so do I." The mother says she gets mad at encouraging her to accept the scars that she didn't ask for. "Her body was stolen from her. She is often sad and angry. Angry that someone was able to take such a special day from her. To harm her friends. To take their love of dance and joy of their summer away from them. To so brutally transform her body in moments and leave her with massive scarring that she will have to look at every day for the rest of her life." Update: Date: 12:02 BST Title: 'Our family has struggled to cope with intrusion from public' - mum of child C1 Content: Judith MoritzReporting from the inquiry The mother of child C1 continues. 'To go through something like this, with so many affected families and to receive the media and public attention that it has brought is often re-traumatising. "We must manage our days around news coverage, interviews, community events and what C1 may be exposed to," she says. "It has been an unwelcome and devastating battle to protect her during such a crucial first year of her recovery. We wanted to give her ownership of what happened to her. To give her time to come to terms with the complexities of her experience and the layers of trauma we must unpick. "We wanted to give her some power back after so much was taken from her. Allow her to tell her story if and when she was ready. We continue to protect her from this. "But online, images of her injured body were shared. TikToks of her injuries were made and shared without any consideration for the child that one day may see it. "C1's father and I have struggled to know how to cope with the intrusion. "To remain quiet and focused on our family, or to step into this and ensure that when she does look online as she gets older, that amongst all of the other adults speaking on her behalf, all of the noise shared by strangers who wanted followers for false stories - that she sees our voices, her mum and dad, telling the world of her bravery. "It is an impossible dice to roll, of which choice is for the best and so telling you today feels like an appropriate way to honour her story; but continue to protect her." Update: Date: 11:59 BST Title: 'She is trying to make sense of something that makes no sense' Content: Jonny HumphriesReporting from the inquiry "She may be a survivor of this attack, but she is still trying to survive this, every single day," the mother of C1 continues. She adds she and the child's father tell their daughter she was brave and they are proud of her actions that day. "She feels that in those moments it was her responsibility to help other girls and get them out of the building. She looks back at what she could or should have done differently and how this might have changed the outcome. "'I could have thrown the beads, so he slipped. We could have jumped out the window.' She struggles to understand how she survived." The mother explains her daughter is grieving, and she has panic attacks and flashbacks. She also suffers from "extreme separation anxiety, meaning she can't attend school full time". "She is trying to make sense of something that makes no sense. She needs us to guarantee her safety in a world where we can't. It is like sucking out poison. "I don't know where to put all the poison at the moment. I just carry it with me. It feels sacred and important to protect." The mother feels a duty to remember everything her daughter tells her in case she wants to hear about it in the future. "My heart is with all the parents who have had to carry their children and families through this nightmare, whilst trying to carry themselves. I always feel stronger and less alone, when I think [of] you all. "I am painfully aware of how close we came to losing her that day and in the days after. How lucky we are to have her with us is not lost on me." She says she is constantly overwhelmed with the relief her daughter is still here. "A feeling often replaced quickly with guilt, fear, grief and devastation at the magnitude of what we are left to carry her through; and the ongoing limitations to her life now." Update: Date: 11:56 BST Title: 'My daughter stood up after enduring more than 20 stab wounds' - child C1's mother Content: Judith MoritzReporting from the inquiry Warning: This post contains distressing and upsetting details The mother of child C1 says that as the attack continued her daughter fell forward and down the stairs. "She pulled herself up on the middle landing and tells me how she yelled for the other girl to follow her. But he started coming after her and she had to run. "She tells me how she couldn't breathe, and things were getting fuzzy — she had, we believe about five or six stab wounds by this point. Mainly in her arms and shoulders from defending herself upstairs. "Somehow, she emerges from the building — and we see her, for a brief moment on CCTV. Escaping. Finding help. Showing so much strength. "But her arm is badly injured and it's trailing behind, and he grabs it. In a flash of struggle, she's gone again. "For 11 seconds she is out of sight. And then there she is again. She has stood up after enduring another attack of more than 20 stab wounds to her back and shoulders. "She stumbles outside to the windows reaching for help. She eventually falls and soon after is carried to safety.' Update: Date: 11:54 BST Title: Child C1 told mother how she helped others during attack Content: Judith MoritzReporting from the inquiry Warning: This post contains distressing and upsetting details The mother of child C1's statement continues. "Recalling those moments in the studio; C1 tells me that she had tried to find a way out. There was only one way to safety, to find her dad and that was down the stairs. She tells us how the door was narrow, and everyone was trying to push through to follow Leanne (Lucas) out of the building. "She describes it as a stampede. In the chaos she was knocked over and found herself trapped and huddled with two other children at the top of the stairs. "She talks quietly of how she put her arms around the girls as he began to attack them. "She tells me with such clarity that a moment came where one of the girls was able to get up, she put the girl's hand on the handrail and told her to go — to get down the stairs - and she did. "The attack continued, she was still holding another girl, 'I crouched over the top of her',", she says. "I told her it would be okay. She recalls this with such purpose and determination, like it was her responsibility. "It happened so fast, but I helped them, I'm glad I could help them, mum," she tells me." Update: Date: 11:51 BST Title: Painful reality that our children fought alone - mother Content: Jonny HumphriesReporting from the inquiry The mother says the damage to her daughter from a 17cm knife was "catastrophic". She says: "The hours and days that followed the attack were a living hell. All of the families affected were brought together by the same event — but since the attack, our lived experiences and the experiences our girls had that day have all been very different. "To try and come to terms with what happened to her and her own experience, I have to tell myself often that more than one truth can exist here; and everyone involved has their own truth of what happened to them that day. She says the most painful of truths to them is that there were no adults to help her during both attacks: "She was only supported by other children." She is in "complete awe" of her daughter's courage and strength. "I would like to say that I don't for a moment doubt that the actions of the teachers there that day saved lives. They escaped to call the police and flag down help, they shielded other children. I am grateful for what they did for those girls. "But the uncomfortable and often unspoken truth of our own reality is that, when the adults left in those first moments, our daughter had to save herself. "It is these untold stories of remarkable strength and bravery that are missing," and these stories need to be heard, she says. She says before her daughter was picked up outside, she "had fought like hell to get herself out that building twice". "And that reality is painful - our children fought alone, they shielded each other, comforted each other, and helped each other and that must be remembered." Update: Date: 11:47 BST Title: Our brave daughter's fears are 'painfully real' now Content: Jonny HumphriesReporting from the inquiry The mother of child C1 describes her daughter as "a beautiful, articulate, fun loving little girl". "We call her 'our little hippie' because she was always completely carefree," the mother tells the inquiry. "She has boundless creative energy and is often barefoot. She is rarely the right way up, she cartwheels in the garden, the park, down the street and even the Tesco shopping aisle. "She is deeply intuitive of others. She trusts herself and has always had a strong sense of who she is." The mother recalls that before last summer "we would say 'feel the fear and do it anyway'. "Turn the fear of doing something new into excitement and go for it, you won't regret it, we would say. "We no longer say that." The mother says that her daughter's fears are "painfully real" now. The words the parents use has adapted. "Instead, we say 'we can do hard things' and 'teamwork makes the dream work'." She recalls that her daughter loved adventure and would try everything. "She went into the world ready to explore and without hesitation, because she believed, rightfully, that she would be safe," she adds. "She does not live that way anymore. I am here today to share some of her story and journey. "I want to tell you of her bravery and strength and how hard she is fighting, still now to survive. I am sharing these deeply personal moments, because you are responsible for what happens next. This inquiry must bring meaningful, substantial change to ensure no child will ever share her experience again. To ensure the safety of our children. "I want you to be in no doubt of the consequences of this horrific attack and what life now looks like for our daughter. I expect the weight of responsibility you hold to be felt in every question you ask and every recommendation you make. Update: Date: 11:41 BST Title: 'She is so much more than that moment of CCTV' Content: Judith MoritzReporting from the inquiry Warning: This post contains distressing and upsetting details The mother of C1 says the details of what happened to C1 were shared at sentencing, and the court and public listened to the "horrific details of her injuries and were shown CCTV footage of her being dragged back into the building, after trying to escape". "That is how she became known in this nightmare. The girl that was dragged back in," the mother says. "But she is so much more than that moment on CCTV." The mum says in those moments her daughter carried courage and determination to survive the thirty-three stab wounds she had. "After four days sedated and ventilated, she had to learn to sit, stand and walk again. She had intensive therapy and physio so that she could use her hands and fingers again. She is still physically recovering.' Update: Date: 11:40 BST Title: Inquiry about to hear from parents of child C1 Content: Judith MoritzReporting from the inquiry The inquiry will now hear from the parents of child C1. They are sitting at the witness stand. The little girl's mum is speaking. Update: Date: 11:39 BST Title: Grateful child survived but attacks changed everything Content: Judith MoritzReporting from the inquiry Reaching the end of the statement, the mother writes: 'C8 and all the people there that day have witnessed horrors that no one should ever see and I don't think I will understand the impact on her until she is grown up. "I am grateful beyond words that she survived. But what she went through, what she saw and what she continues to carry has changed everything.' The statement ends there. Update: Date: 11:37 BST Title: 'My daughter needs constant support, reassurance and protection' Content: Jonny HumphriesReporting from the inquiry The witness statement from the mother of child C8 continues: "Sleep remains a huge issue. My daughter struggles to fall asleep and it is often very late when she does. When she does, she continues to suffer from frequent nightmares and wakes in distress. Doctors visits are now traumatic, she is terrified of needles, the feeling of something sharp being close to her cannot be managed. "She is hyper aware of people she doesn't know, and has expressed fear of men, particularly those who are black, influenced by the traumatic associations she made during the incident. This has led to difficult but necessary conversations about race. School has been a real challenge. "I am so proud of my daughter for returning but she has struggled and has fallen significantly behind in her learning. She was already working hard to keep up before the incident, but now her anxiety and difficulty concentrating have made things worse. "She often has to leave the classroom when overwhelmed or upset. She tells me her mind wanders during lessons, she has felt scared that something is going to happen and unable to focus. Adjustments have been made at school, such as where she sits in the classroom but the trauma continues to interfere with her ability to learn. "As her main caregiver I have not been able to consistently return to work. My daughter's needs changed overnight. Where she was once an independent and joyful child she now needs constant support, reassurance and protection. "I have suffered from PTSD, flashbacks and anxiety. As well as insomnia, sleep paralysis and constant emotional exhaustion. For a long time every phone call sent me in to a panic. "Therapy has helped me to cope better but I still have a long road ahead. I have tried to shield her from the media coverage but it has not always been possible. "I feel helpless that I cannot do more to protect her from this, or from reminders that sometimes come from nowhere and can be triggering." Update: Date: 11:36 BST Title: C8 constantly scans for danger and needs to know where exits are - statement Content: Judith MoritzReporting from the inquiry 'Since that day, C8's life has completed changed," the statement continues. "She cannot be left alone and only feels safe with a very small number of people, immediate family or very close friends. "Where she was once eager to go off with her friends she now needs my support if it is somewhere public or unknown. Simple days out now need a level of safety planning that we would never have considered before. "Immediately after the incident, C8 could not even go in to the toilet at home alone. She had heard someone say he had gone into the toilets and whilst we know that to not be true her fear was real," the mother's lawyer reads. The lawyer reads that the child always needs to know where exits are and she scans places for danger constantly. She once saw a newspaper with a picture of the perpetrator on it and since then "groups of school children, especially older boys in uniform are a major trigger". "We have been unable to get on public transport to and from school since September for this reason," the statement adds. Update: Date: 11:32 BST Title: Mother of child C8: 'What I saw is something no parent should ever see' Content: Judith MoritzReporting from the inquiry The mother of child C8's statement goes on, read by her lawyer. She recalls receiving the phone call detailing what had happened that day. "I was at work when I received a panicked phone call from her friend's mum. "She couldn't find C8 or her daughter. That moment, the sound of fear in her voice and the panic I felt will never leave me. "I rushed to the scene and what I saw is something no parent should ever see. "C8 had sustained serious physical injuries including a stab wound to her arm and a cut to her face and chin. "She remembers the attack vividly — how he tried to get her face, how she saw other girls being hurt. She told me later she thought it had to be fake, because she couldn't believe something that terrible could really be happening.' Update: Date: 11:29 BST Title: The Southport attacks changed everything - mother of injured child Content: Jonny HumphriesReporting from the inquiry "Before July, my daughter was like any other seven-year-old little girl," the statement from the mother of child C8 begins. "She had an incredible energy and was full of life. She was kind-hearted, always looking out for others and especially sensitive to anyone being left out. She was lively around people she knew, and would come out of her shell once comfortable around new people, the lawyer reads. The mother had a "really close bond" with her daughter, spending lots of time together as a family. "She was independent and happy. C8 was really creative, she loved singing, dancing, art and activities like tennis and gymnastics. She enjoyed school and tried her best," the statement reads. "The incident in July changed everything. "C8 went to the event with her best friend. Her friend's mum took them and it was meant to be a fun way to start the summer holidays. She left that morning very excited."

Boy, 17, planned Southport-style knife-attack at dance school after praising Axel Rudakubana and suggested targeting Oasis comeback concert
Boy, 17, planned Southport-style knife-attack at dance school after praising Axel Rudakubana and suggested targeting Oasis comeback concert

Daily Mail​

time05-07-2025

  • Daily Mail​

Boy, 17, planned Southport-style knife-attack at dance school after praising Axel Rudakubana and suggested targeting Oasis comeback concert

A teenager has appeared in court after police were alerted that he was planning a Southport-style knife attack on a dance school near his home. The 17-year-old, who cannot be named because of his age, had talked of emulating Axel Rudakubana, who killed three girls aged six, seven and nine, during a Taylor Swift-themed dance class in July last year. The boy, who was living with his parents in a village near Cwmbran in South Wales, researched how to obtain large knives and, in a chat with a friend on April 19, sent an image of a large knife for sale online, saying: 'Would this work?' Police also found a note on his phone on April 28 headed 'places to attack'. It included images of a dance school near his home, along with directions on how to walk there. Location data suggested he had been close to the school just a few days earlier. The teenager had also researched other potential targets, including his own school, and told others on Snapchat of his plan to attack the first Oasis reunion concert in Cardiff. An earlier hearing was told the youth had participated in discussions on the social media app in which he praised Rudakubana. In one chat he said he had tried to make ricin poison – the same substance manufactured by the Southport killer – although he later told police this was not true. One of those he was talking to on Snapchat reported him to police. Following concerns by his family, the teenager met a counsellor on June 2 and revealed he planned to commit a 'Rudakubana-style attack', leading to a second report to police. At around 10.30am the same day, he transferred an al-Qaeda manual between phones. During police interviews, he admitted he had thoughts of launching attacks on a regular basis but said he did not intend to carry them through. The teenager appeared at Westminster Magistrates' Court on June 21, where he indicated a guilty plea to a single charge of possessing a document useful for terrorism. Sentencing was adjourned to a later date.

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