There has been an outcry about schooling missed during the pandemic. We need a similar approach to keep the vulnerable safe

One by one, the brightly coloured helium balloons floated up into the wintry sky. They were released at the weekend outside the house in which six-year-old Arthur Labinjo-Hughes was murdered, as a way of trying to show that he had been loved.

Of all the harrowing details to emerge from the trial of his stepmother, Emma Tustin, and his natural father, Thomas Hughes, the one that many parents will have found unbearable was a film of Arthur sobbing, “No one loves me.” He had been brave enough to try to tell grownups he trusted that something was wrong, and yet nobody came to save him. He must have felt, at the end, so abandoned. What makes this awful case so haunting is that it reminds us of what too many other children will have experienced when lockdown sealed them off from the outside world.

Gaby Hinsliff is a Guardian columnist

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Shinzo Abe’s body taken to Tokyo as election campaign resumes in shadow of killing

Politicians vow not to let assassination of their longest-serving PM stop democratic…

Interim report reveals 400 submissions over UK gymnastics abuse

Abuse includes bullying, gaslighting and coercive control Review completion not expected until…

Memphis

memphis shooting, memphis news

Fauci

Anthony Fauci, dr anthony fauci, dr fauci