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R.I.P Khrya your mum, dad and step dad are all waste


The Somalian

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You guys must remember this case with the lil girl starved to death by her mum who is now in jail mad c*nt

but I am watching the news and can see the dad chatting sh*t about the authority's should of done more as they were told

but I think he should look in the mirror.

Because if I had a youth and me and the baby mum were no longer together I would make sure I am in my childs life, how can he say all this

when he did not see his child often enough not to see she was starving

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/8537298.stm

What do you think about the dad mouthing of about the authority's

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just saw this on the news, such a sad story pretty little girl as well. Am I the only one as well who wondered how the neighbour never clocked on or remotely thought something werent right; surely she musta seen that the children looked a little malnourished or the mother was a bit weird.

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the girl was practically locked inside the house for 5 months, they took her out of school etc, so no-one on road would have been able to tell she was being starved to death

they said that when she died, they couldn't even calculate her body mass index because she was so frail

it's so sad

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these type of mental health issues are real and rife in areas of social deprivation

there are so many mad individuals out there with children, you can see them depressed eyes in women in poor areas on a daily basis, u kno theres some sort of abuse goin on

them depressed women then are preyed upon by these mad controlling etc etc males

its a truly f*cked up world for poor people, for the children that grow up an get out they are lucky

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Here is a timeline detailing the events surrounding the seven-year-old's death.

6 December 2007

Khyra Ishaq is removed from her school by her mother, Angela Gordon.

19 December 2007

Concerned about her welfare, the deputy head contacts social services. She and a colleague make a home visit but do not manage to see Khyra as they are not allowed in.

28 January 2008

Social worker Ranjit Mann visits Khyra's home in Handsworth. She knocks on the door but there is no answer.

29 - 30 January 2008

Gordon contacts Ms Mann by telephone, leaves a message but later refuses to arrange for the social worker to visit again.

8 February 2008

An educational social worker and a council mentor visit Khyra's home to offer advice on home schooling. They do not see Khyra.

21 February 2008

Birmingham City Council social workers Sanya Scott and Anne Gondo pay a pre-arranged visit but are refused entry to the house. The women decide that they have no concerns for Khyra's well-being after she is brought to meet them at the front door.

8 March 2008

A neighbour sees Khyra dressed in just her underwear in her back garden in Leyton Road looking "abnormally thin".

16 April 2008

The council mentor returns to the home but there is no answer. He leaves after posting a note through the letterbox.

17 May 2008

Khyra is discovered by paramedics at the family home in a state of starvation. Her weight had dropped to 2st 9lb (16.7 kg) and she had suffered an infection. She is taken to Birmingham Children's Hospital where she is pronounced dead.

19 May 2008

Gordon and Abuhamza appear at Birmingham Magistrates' Court for the first time to face charges of neglect. They are remanded in custody.

23 May 2008

Birmingham City Council promises to do all it can to find out how Khyra died. The independent Birmingham Safeguarding Children Board begins a review into Khyra's care.

24 May 2008

Khyra's natural father, Ishaq Abu Zaire, speaks about his daughter's death, describing it as "absolutely disgraceful". He says he feels let down by the authorities.

28 May 2008

Gordon and Abuhamza appear in court via video link accused of causing or allowing Khyra's death.

15 July 2008

Gordon appears in court to face five new child cruelty charges. Abuhamza is also charged with the same offences but does not attend court because of health reasons.

13 August 2008

The Crown Prosecution Service charges the pair with Khyra's murder.

12 December 2008

Khyra's funeral is held at Salafi Mosque in Small Heath after Friday prayers.

6 February 2009

Gordon and Abuhamza appear at Birmingham Crown Court to deny the murder charge. They had earlier denied causing or allowing Khyra's death.

3 June 2009

Abuhamza pleads guilty to five charges of child cruelty. Gordon denies them.

5 June 2009

The first trial for Gordon and Abuhamza begins at Birmingham Crown Court. Jurors are told that UK doctors had rarely seen such a severe case of malnutrition.

29 June 2009

The trial is halted after three jury members were discharged for personal reasons.

5 October 2009

A report criticises Birmingham's children's services as not "fit for purpose" following an inquiry. The death of Khyra was one of those looked at during the council investigation.

19 January 2010

The pair's retrial begins at Birmingham Crown Court. The jury is told that Khyra succumbed to an infection after being starved "quite deliberately" while being kept prisoner in her own home.

12 February 2010

Abuhamza admits manslaughter in the fourth week of the trial and the murder charge is dropped following new evidence about his mental health.

Gordon also admits manslaughter but her plea is not accepted and her trial for murder continues.

25 February 2010

Gordon is cleared of murder but has her plea of guilty to manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility accepted.

She also admits five counts of child cruelty.

Terrible

SMH

Authorities failed her simple

so sad

R.I.P

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Guest TimeBomb

very sad, she is an angel and will have a place in jannah inshallah.

dont blame the real dad tho, the laws in place in this country mean if the mother makes it difficult for u theres very little u can do, currently in that position and have no idea how my daughter is being treated.

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  • 2 weeks later...

Birmingham couple jailed for starving Khyra Ishaq

_47372398_angelaabu1copy.jpg

The mother of a seven-year-old girl who starved to death at her Birmingham home has been sentenced to 15 years and her stepfather jailed indefinitely.

Angela Gordon, 35, was cleared last month of murdering Khyra Ishaq but admitted manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility.

She will be jailed for seven-and-a-half years and spend the rest on licence.

Gordon's partner, Junaid Abuhamza, 31, also had a manslaughter plea accepted after a report about his mental health.

He must serve a minimum of seven-and-half years, the judge at Birmingham Crown Court said.

Khyra weighed 2st 9lb (16.5kg) when she was found severely emaciated at a house in Handsworth in 2008.

'Chilling cruelty'

She was taken to Birmingham Children's Hospital where she was declared dead.

Mr Justice Roderick Evans told the pair their behaviour was "chilling in its harshness and cruelty".

During the retrial, which was ordered after the first trial collapsed, jurors heard Khyra had been killed by an infection that been caused by months of deliberate starvation.

The court heard how the house was well-stocked with food, but this was kept locked away out of the reach of Khyra and five other children in the care of the defendants.

They were also starved, two of them suffering from dangerous malnutrition before they were rescued.

The pair earlier admitted five charges of child cruelty relating to those children.

The judge said the sentences were also given for those charges.

Birmingham's social services department has been criticised for not intervening in the case.

But Tony Howell, strategic director for Children and Young People in Birmingham, said they cannot guarantee every child's safety.

Gordon was told by the judge her cruelty was "horrific" and made worse because she was the young girl's mother.

"It is not right to say that these children suffered from neglect," the judge said.

"Neglect is an inadequate and inappropriate description of the way they were treated.

"Rather, they were subjected to a domestic regime of punishment which was chilling in its harshness and cruelty.

"A regime introduced by you, Abuhamza, as it had its origins in your own upbringing, but a regime to which you, Gordon, became a party."

He added that he was satisfied that when Abuhamza became well enough to realise what he had done, he "felt and expressed genuine remorse".

Gordon was told that she was a "caring mother" up until the end of 2007.

Mr Justice Roderick Evans said he accepted she had grieved for her daughter, Gordon had only "very recently" experienced genuine remorse after being in a state of denial.

ANALYSIS

Peter Wilson, Midlands Today Home Affairs correspondent

Junaid Abuhamza is suffering from schizophrenia and although he was fit to appear in court it was agreed by three psychiatrists that he will require lifelong support and monitoring.

It is also agreed he could suffer a relapse in the future which would mean he would pose a risk to the public.

It was because of this risk that an Indeterminate Sentence for Public Protection (IPP) was imposed.

This means the judge set a minimum tariff that he has to serve in prison.

But because of the IPP he will not be released until he is able to show he is fit and does not pose a threat to the community.

He will undergo classes and intensive supervision and it is likely doctors consulted during this trial will be approached to decide if he can be released in the future.

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