Martha Morris
Member
- Joined
- May 15, 2013
- Messages
- 319
- Reaction score
- 9
This is just utterly heart wrenching. I cannot even begin to imagine what the parents and families of those killed and injured must be going through.
Megan Hurley is also deceased. Age unknown, but she attended primary school.
http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/manchester-terror-attack-megan-hurley-10486331
Article from 2016 about Martyn Hett launching a social media campaign to sell his Mum's homemade toys after she was upset nobody bought them at a craft fair.
https://www.buzzfeed.com/benhenry/cries-for-a-million-years?utm_term=.dho7dwdBx#.rdqMd9d4O
I hate to be sceptical, but the announcement of her death comes from a JustGiving Page, and all I can see is media links from that. I can't find anything on Facebook or twitter about her, and there are two conflicting ages, 5 and 15. I hope I'm not being overly cynical, but until I hear more I don't want to jump to conclusions
I hate to be so cynicalsorry
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I can understand your caution. One thing that slightly worries me about this is all the announcements on tabloid news websites that are based on Facebook posts or Tweets, peoples eagerness to post tributes online, whilst being well meaning, can lead to people finding out about friends or even family passing away before anyone has the chance to tell them properly. In December last year a close friend of mine died of cancer, while it was expected it was still a horrible shock to open facebook one sleepy morning and see "RIP *** ****" as a status from another friend.
I am very sorry about your friend, cancer is so cruel![]()
The other problem with social media is I've seen so many false reports of people missing, people being found when they haven't actually been, and people being declared dead when they are either safe or still missing but the family has no word yet.![]()
I tend to like using the BBC as my source because I know they're over cautious and won't report anything without proper validation
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I hate to be sceptical, but the announcement of her death comes from a JustGiving Page, and all I can see is media links from that. I can't find anything on Facebook or twitter about her, and there are two conflicting ages, 5 and 15. I hope I'm not being overly cynical, but until I hear more I don't want to jump to conclusions
I hate to be so cynicalsorry
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Mayor of London, September 2016:
Sadiq Khan: London mayor says terror attacks 'part and parcel' of living in a major city
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Of course the mayor says that. He needs everyone to accept it as the new norm.
He wouldn't need to smuggle anything from Libya, everything you need to make a bomb can be purchased in the UK.
May 24 2017, 9:22 am ET
Manchester Arena Suicide Bombing: Dr. Mounir Hakimi Says Victims Reminiscent of Syria
by Alexander Smith
MANCHESTER, England — Dr. Mounir Hakimi is all too familiar with innocent children being killed by bombs. He just never thought it would happen so close to home.
Hakimi is a surgeon who lives in Britain. But he grew up in Syria and has returned to the Middle Eastern country regularly to help train doctors and carry out operations during its years-long civil war...
http://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/ma...rena-suicide-bombing-dr-mounir-hakimi-n763936
By DAN BILEFSKYMAY 24, 2017He Went to Manchester Arena as a Beggar. He Left as a Hero.
LONDON He was there, reportedly, because it was a good place to beg.
As Manchester and the rest of Britain were coming to terms with the countrys deadliest terrorist attack in more than a decade, Chris Parker, a 33-year-old who has been homeless for about a year, was being hailed on social media for his selflessness and courage.
Rather than running for safety after the bombing, Mr. Parker went to the aid of victims. He pulled nails out of childrens arms and from the face of a small girl. He comforted another girl who had lost her legs, wrapping her in a T-shirt. He cradled a dying woman in his arms.
Mr. Parker had been panhandling in the concourse area outside Manchester Arena when the bomb exploded, according to local news reports. The force of the blast knocked him to the floor, but he was unfazed.
Just because I am homeless doesnt mean I havent got a heart, or Im not human still,
.Chris Parker, a 33-year-old homeless man who came to the aid of the wounded after the Manchester bombing
After hearing about what her son had done, Mr. Parkers mother reached out. This is my son and I am desperate to get in touch with him, she wrote on the fund-raising page. We have been estranged for a very long time, and I had no idea he was homeless. I am very proud of him, and I think he might need me right now.
[h=1]https://www.nytimes.com/2017/05/24/world/europe/homeless-hero-manchester.html
He Went to Manchester Arena as a Beggar. He Left as a Hero.[/h] By DAN BILEFSKYMAY 24, 2017
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