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Re: البشير هو المسئول من هاشم عثمان الزبير (Re: عرفات حسين)
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  Quote: A young Sudanese migrant died of devastating head injuries as he travelled on top of a freight train through the Channel Tunnel, an inquest has heard.Husham Osman Alzubair, 22, was trying to join family members in Britain to start a new life.He wanted to enroll on a civil engineering Masters degree course in the UK after leaving his home village near Khartoum earlier this year.But he was found dead on the rear wagon of a freight train as it arrived through the tunnel at Folkestone, Kent in July.An inquest, held at Folkestone Magistrates' Court today, heard a large number of illegal immigrants had earlier tried to breach the Chunnel's security, with 46 people being detained by police.Darfur-born Mr Alzubair, an engineering graduate, was first spotted on CCTV cameras in France lying on the rear wagon of a freight train just after 3am on July 23.As the train arrived on the English side of the Channel Tunnel, a security team saw his body lying in the same position, the inquest was told.A bid to revive him failed and he was pronounced dead at the scene by paramedics who were already at the scene dealing with another incident.Detective Sergeant Matthew Jones, of Kent Police, told the inquest that officers first believed the body was of a teenage boy, aged between 15 and 17.Mr Jones said the last outgoing call recorded from the phone was around 13 minutes before Mr Alzubair was first spotted, to an unknown person.Birmingham's Sudanese and Muslim community held a funeral for Mr Alzubair in SeptemberHusham's brother Husam prays as he is buried in the ceremony which took place after his body was releasedIt emerged today that Mr Alzubair (whose funeral is pictured) died of head injuries as he travelled on the train A picture of a Barclaycard led investigators to Mr Alzubair's brother, Husam, who was living in Birmingham, and DNA from him was used to confirm his identity.Listening in court to the evidence was Husam, a friend and two cousins of Mr Alzubair.It was initially believed Mr Alzubair had been electrocuted but a post-mortem examination confirmed his cause of death was through traumatic haemorrhage skull fracture. Toxicology tests for drugs and alcohol were negative.Asked whether the situation relating to incursions had now changed in France, Mr Jones said: 'It is nowhere near the levels that it was during the summer.'In my opinion that is probably down to the changing weather conditions and the recent response by the French police.'No exact date was revealed about when Mr Alzubair had arrived in Calais, where around 6,000 migrants are camped at a site dubbed Jungle II.His death happened at a time when migrants regularly broke through fences near the tunnel entranceA number of migrants have died this year as they attempted to make their way through the tunnelCoroner Rachel Redman questioned how he came to sustain his fatal injuries, but Mr Jones said it remained a mystery.He said: 'We have no information to help answer that question. Our best guess would be that during the period that clandestines were running along the train and jumping on, we suspect when he jumped on he received that injury, but we have no CCTV or witnesses to confirm that.'The inquest heard that Detective Chief Inspector Simon Morris had asked the coroner to write a report requiring Chunnel operator Eurotunnel to review its security procedures.But Ms Redman refused the request, saying this was the only death that had been reported to her, and the problems appeared to have 'abated'.She recorded a verdict of accidental death.Afterwards, Mr Alzubair's cousin, Alnoor Shuaib, 32, said the family still had unanswered questions about how he died.He said: 'Maybe someone pushed him, we don't know. We have not got any evidence, and that is a real surprise to me.' |
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