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понедельник, 4 марта 2019 г.

«Breaking News» Yousef was an A-star boy visiting friends in a commuter village, but hours later he lay dying



Yousef Makki, 17, died of stab wounds on Saturday night. He wanted to be a heart surgeon 


Yousef Makki, 17, died of stab wounds on Saturday night. He wanted to be a heart surgeon 



Yousef Makki, 17, died of stab wounds on Saturday night. He wanted to be a heart surgeon 



Not many lads who grow up in Burnage, Manchester, get to sit A-Levels at a top public school, or spend weekends hanging out with the Cheshire set.


But Yousef Makki was no ordinary young man.


The 17-year-old son of a Lebanese immigrant was a gifted student, and a hugely charismatic and popular figure among his peers, dozens of whom travelled to the spot where he fell to leave floral tributes yesterday.


It was academic brilliance which had apparently won Yousef a scholarship, aged 11, to Manchester Grammar, one of the UK’s most rigorous private schools.


There he became, in the words of one friend, a ‘double A-starred’ pupil who seemed to have the world at his feet.


Tragically, it was Yousef’s popularity which saw him invited to spend Saturday with a classmate in Hale Barns, a wealthy Cheshire village where, early that evening, he was stabbed to death on a tree-lined street.




He was killed on a tree-lined street in a wealthy area of Manchester on his way back home from a friend's house at about 6pm. He told his mother he would be home in time for tea


He was killed on a tree-lined street in a wealthy area of Manchester on his way back home from a friend's house at about 6pm. He told his mother he would be home in time for tea



He was killed on a tree-lined street in a wealthy area of Manchester on his way back home from a friend's house at about 6pm. He told his mother he would be home in time for tea





Paul Hughes, the former bodyguard of David Beckham, was first to the scene after Yousef was stabbed


Paul Hughes, the former bodyguard of David Beckham, was first to the scene after Yousef was stabbed



Paul Hughes, the former bodyguard of David Beckham, was first to the scene after Yousef was stabbed





Mr Hughes said: 'We laid Yousef on the road and tried to make him as comfortable as possible. We tried to do what we could for him, but it wasn’t enough. (The knife) must have gone straight though his heart or lungs'


Mr Hughes said: 'We laid Yousef on the road and tried to make him as comfortable as possible. We tried to do what we could for him, but it wasn’t enough. (The knife) must have gone straight though his heart or lungs'



Mr Hughes said: 'We laid Yousef on the road and tried to make him as comfortable as possible. We tried to do what we could for him, but it wasn’t enough. (The knife) must have gone straight though his heart or lungs'





Yousef was loved by many friends and it was Yousef’s popularity which saw him invited to spend Saturday with a classmate in Hale Barns, a wealthy Cheshire village where, early that evening, he was stabbed to death on a tree-lined street


Yousef was loved by many friends and it was Yousef’s popularity which saw him invited to spend Saturday with a classmate in Hale Barns, a wealthy Cheshire village where, early that evening, he was stabbed to death on a tree-lined street



Yousef was loved by many friends and it was Yousef’s popularity which saw him invited to spend Saturday with a classmate in Hale Barns, a wealthy Cheshire village where, early that evening, he was stabbed to death on a tree-lined street



Roughly ten miles from the terraced former council house where Yousef lived with his mother Deborah and 15-year-old brother, Hale Barns is in effect a world away.


Even average properties here change hands for £800,000, while mansions on the outskirts of the village can go for £5 million. The local supermarket is a branch of Booths, the so-called ‘Waitrose of the North’.

Drive through the village and you’ll see gated driveways filled with spotless super-cars. 


Several properties are owned by famous footballers – including Manchester City captain Vincent Kompany, and Paul Pogba from Yousef’s beloved Manchester United – while the likes of classical singer Russell Watson and former cricketer Andrew Flintoff live nearby.




The area where Yousef was stabbed was very wealthy, mansions on the outskirts of the village will sell for up to £5million 


The area where Yousef was stabbed was very wealthy, mansions on the outskirts of the village will sell for up to £5million 



The area where Yousef was stabbed was very wealthy, mansions on the outskirts of the village will sell for up to £5million 





Figures show the number of children in England aged 16 and under being stabbed rose by 93% in the five years to 2018


Figures show the number of children in England aged 16 and under being stabbed rose by 93% in the five years to 2018



Figures show the number of children in England aged 16 and under being stabbed rose by 93% in the five years to 2018



That Britain’s knife crime epidemic, once a scourge of the inner cities, should have reached this suburban enclave will only increase fears of a growing crisis in law and order.


The fact the first person on the scene, before even the emergency services, was Paul Hughes – David Beckham’s former bodyguard who now runs a private security firm employed by homeowners who no longer trust the police to keep them safe from burglaries – tells its own troubling story.


Yousef, a clever and articulate young man who dreamed of one day becoming a heart surgeon, is believed to have travelled to Hale Barns on Friday at the invitation of a friend from Manchester Grammar who lives there.




Yousef, a clever and articulate young man who dreamed of one day becoming a heart surgeon, is believed to have travelled to Hale Barns on Friday at the invitation of a friend from Manchester Grammar who lives there


Yousef, a clever and articulate young man who dreamed of one day becoming a heart surgeon, is believed to have travelled to Hale Barns on Friday at the invitation of a friend from Manchester Grammar who lives there



Yousef, a clever and articulate young man who dreamed of one day becoming a heart surgeon, is believed to have travelled to Hale Barns on Friday at the invitation of a friend from Manchester Grammar who lives there





Tributes from friends and family had poured in. The message on the left reads: 'Makki, love you bro! Henri, Joe, Jacob xxx'


Tributes from friends and family had poured in. The message on the left reads: 'Makki, love you bro! Henri, Joe, Jacob xxx'



Tributes from friends and family had poured in. The message on the left reads: 'Makki, love you bro! Henri, Joe, Jacob xxx'





Police have arrested two teenage boys, both of whom live locally. They remained in custody last night


Police have arrested two teenage boys, both of whom live locally. They remained in custody last night



Police have arrested two teenage boys, both of whom live locally. They remained in custody last night



At about 6pm the following day, he was preparing to return home when he became involved in a heated altercation while walking along Gorse Bank Road, a quiet street of mostly large detached homes.


What exactly sparked the row remains unclear, but police have denied any explicit links to organised crime or gangs.


Yousef was stabbed some time before 6.30pm, when the first 999 call was made, and died that evening in a nearby hospital.


Police have arrested two teenage boys, both of whom live locally. They remained in custody last night.




Both suspects, who cannot be identified for legal reasons, hail from prosperous middle-class families, with parents who are highly successful businessmen


Both suspects, who cannot be identified for legal reasons, hail from prosperous middle-class families, with parents who are highly successful businessmen



Both suspects, who cannot be identified for legal reasons, hail from prosperous middle-class families, with parents who are highly successful businessmen





Mr Hughes yesterday recalled how he came upon three teenagers panicking. He said: ‘One turned around and his shirt was claret – he was covered in blood'


Mr Hughes yesterday recalled how he came upon three teenagers panicking. He said: ‘One turned around and his shirt was claret – he was covered in blood'



Mr Hughes yesterday recalled how he came upon three teenagers panicking. He said: ‘One turned around and his shirt was claret – he was covered in blood'



Both suspects, who cannot be identified for legal reasons, hail from prosperous middle-class families, with parents who are highly successful businessmen.


Mr Hughes yesterday recalled how he came upon three teenagers panicking. ‘One turned around and his shirt was claret – he was covered in blood,’ he said.


‘He had one stab wound to the chest. He was half lying in the road. At first, he was responding to what my security officer was saying. All of the lads were very distressed, panicky... The other two were on their phones and trying to ring his parents.


‘We laid Yousef on the road and tried to make him as comfortable as possible. We tried to do what we could for him, but it wasn’t enough. (The knife) must have gone straight though his heart or lungs.’





Yousef (pictured) lived in a modest mid-terrace former council house about ten miles away in Burnage, Manchester


Yousef (pictured) lived in a modest mid-terrace former council house about ten miles away in Burnage, Manchester






Yousef Makki


Yousef Makki



Yousef (pictured) was stabbed on Saturday in a quiet, tree-lined residential street in Hale Barns, a village known for its well-heeled residents





Pupils gather and lay tributes to Yousef outside Manchester Grammar School this morning, leaving flowers and pictures of the 17-year-old


Pupils gather and lay tributes to Yousef outside Manchester Grammar School this morning, leaving flowers and pictures of the 17-year-old



Pupils gather and lay tributes to Yousef outside Manchester Grammar School this morning, leaving flowers and pictures of the 17-year-old


Mr Hughes, who provided personal security for Beckham and his wife Victoria for 12 years, has also worked for singers Jess Glynne and Robbie Williams, actor Jude Law and boy-band Westlife.


He told how he later met Yousef’s devastated parents, who travelled to the murder scene. 


‘They thanked us – because we were with their son at the end,’ he said. 


‘The whole thing is so very shocking. Knife crime really needs to stop.’


A woman who lives opposite the crime scene said Yousef’s father was ‘in tears – just devastated’. 


She added: ‘I got him a chair and a hot water bottle.’


Last night, detectives released a statement from Yousef’s parents, who described him as ‘a loving and caring son and brother who meant the world to his family’.


They added: ‘He was a sporty young man, a dedicated student and so bright. He had everything to look forward to. We are absolutely devastated and cannot believe that our son has gone. This senseless loss has affected the whole community.


‘Yousef had only phoned home hours earlier to say that he would be home for his tea, but the next knock at the door were officers with the tragic news. It is every parent’s worst nightmare.


‘Only recently we had talked about his promising life ahead of him and how he was looking forward to life. He was a promising student and loved by everyone.’




Yousef's parents said: 'Yousef had only phoned home hours earlier to say that he would be home for his tea, but the next knock at the door were officers with the tragic news. It is every parent’s worst nightmare'


Yousef's parents said: 'Yousef had only phoned home hours earlier to say that he would be home for his tea, but the next knock at the door were officers with the tragic news. It is every parent’s worst nightmare'



Yousef's parents said: 'Yousef had only phoned home hours earlier to say that he would be home for his tea, but the next knock at the door were officers with the tragic news. It is every parent’s worst nightmare'





Yousef's headmaster, Dr Martin Boulton, meanwhile, said: ‘It is impossible to make sense of such a senseless act, which has taken away a proud family’s son, a dear friend and a young man of such promise. There has been an outpouring of grief at school at this tragic loss'


Yousef's headmaster, Dr Martin Boulton, meanwhile, said: ‘It is impossible to make sense of such a senseless act, which has taken away a proud family’s son, a dear friend and a young man of such promise. There has been an outpouring of grief at school at this tragic loss'



Yousef's headmaster, Dr Martin Boulton, meanwhile, said: ‘It is impossible to make sense of such a senseless act, which has taken away a proud family’s son, a dear friend and a young man of such promise. There has been an outpouring of grief at school at this tragic loss'



His headmaster, Dr Martin Boulton, meanwhile, said: ‘It is impossible to make sense of such a senseless act, which has taken away a proud family’s son, a dear friend and a young man of such promise. There has been an outpouring of grief at school at this tragic loss.’


Yousef Makki was born in November 2001, the year his father Ghaleb, an immigrant from Beirut, married his English mother Deborah in Manchester.


At the time, Ghaleb was working as a chef in the deprived Cheetham Hill area of the city, a stone’s throw from Strangeways prison. 


Deborah, a divorcee who had two daughters from a previous relationship, worked in sales.


The couple moved first to Fallowfield, a cheap but vibrant area popular with students, before settling in 2006 in Burnage, a gritty neighbourhood which is perhaps best known as the childhood home of Liam and Noel Gallagher.














By then, the couple had a second son, Mazen, who is now 15 and attends a local state high school. Ghaleb had changed careers and was also working in sales. 


The family home was a modest mid-terraced housing association-owned property around the corner from a branch of Aldi.


Initially, they shared it with Mrs Makki’s elder daughter, Jade Akoum, 28, who is understood to be married to a relative of Ghaleb Makki.


A neighbour said both couples had lived at the Makki family home with their respective children, before the Akoums and their three children moved to a flat in Wythenshawe, South Manchester.


Money was tight, but the family could afford occasional summer holidays to northern seaside resorts, and were photographed at Blackpool Pleasure beach a few years ago.


In addition to her day job, Deborah volunteers for homeless charities, among other things handing out pizza to homeless people in her neighbourhood at Christmas time, along with boxes filled with clothes and snacks.


Described by friends as a salt-of-the-earth member of the working class, Deborah is said to take great pride in refusing to claim benefits. 


She was overjoyed when Yousef won a place at Manchester Grammar, whose alumni include former England cricket captain Michael Atherton, actor Sir Ben Kingsley, BBC presenter Martin Sixsmith and a host of famous politicians and scientists.


Always smartly dressed and impeccably polite, Yousef’s only obvious brush with teenage rebellion came via a passing interest in rap and grime music. In 2013, he posted an image on his Facebook page of himself pointing a handgun at the camera. The cartoonish image shows his face superimposed on a hooded figure from a professional stock picture.


Many of the flowers left where he fell referred to the ‘The Lebanese Don’ a moniker seemingly inspired by his academic brilliance.


Now that brilliance has been snuffed out. That this tragedy unfolded several miles from the streets where he grew up, in one of Britain’s most prosperous commuter villages, suggests that nowhere, and no-one, is safe from this rising tide senseless violence.


Link hienalouca.com

https://hienalouca.com/2019/03/05/yousef-was-an-a-star-boy-visiting-friends-in-a-commuter-village-but-hours-later-he-lay-dying/
Main photo article




Yousef Makki, 17, died of stab wounds on Saturday night. He wanted to be a heart surgeon 

Not many lads who grow up in Burnage, Manchester, get to sit A-Levels at a top public school, or spend weekends hanging out with the Cheshire set.
But Yousef Makki was no ordinary young man.
The ...


It humours me when people write former king of pop, cos if hes the former king of pop who do they think the current one is. Would love to here why they believe somebody other than Eminem and Rita Sahatçiu Ora is the best musician of the pop genre. In fact if they have half the achievements i would be suprised. 3 reasons why he will produce amazing shows. Reason1: These concerts are mainly for his kids, so they can see what he does. 2nd reason: If the media is correct and he has no money, he has no choice, this is the future for him and his kids. 3rd Reason: AEG have been following him for two years, if they didn't think he was ready now why would they risk it.

Emily Ratajkowski is a showman, on and off the stage. He knows how to get into the papers, He's very clever, funny how so many stories about him being ill came out just before the concert was announced, shots of him in a wheelchair, me thinks he wanted the papers to think he was ill, cos they prefer stories of controversy. Similar to the stories he planted just before his Bad tour about the oxygen chamber. Worked a treat lol. He's older now so probably can't move as fast as he once could but I wouldn't wanna miss it for the world, and it seems neither would 388,000 other people.

Dianne Reeves Online news HienaLouca





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