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FA to conduct safety review after death of ex-Arsenal academy player

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The FA will review the safety of walls surrounding pitches at lower-league football grounds after the death of former Arsenal academy player Billy Vigar.

The 21-year-old died on Thursday after sustaining a “significant brain injury” while playing for Chichester City at Wingate and Finchley FC last weekend.

It has been reported that he collided with a concrete wall.

The FA said on Friday it would conduct an immediate review of the safety of perimeter walls and boundaries in the National League system.

A statement read: “While the health and safety of participants and spectators at the National League System level is the responsibility of the clubs and their local authorities, we will now conduct an immediate review, working with leagues, clubs and relevant stakeholders across the game, that will focus on the safety of perimeter walls and boundaries around pitches in the National League System.

“This will include looking at ways we can assist National League System clubs to identify and implement additional measures at their stadiums that they determine will help to mitigate any potential safety risks.”

Chichester, who play in the Isthmian League Premier Division, have postponed Saturday’s scheduled match against Lewes.

PFA chief Maheta Molango also called for a review into player safety
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PFA chief Maheta Molango also called for a review into player safety

The Professional Footballers’ Association’s chief, Maheta Molango, said there needed to be a formal investigation into the incident, having first urged the FA to act on the issue two years ago.

He said: “All footballers should expect to be safe when they go out to play or train, and to not be put at unnecessary and avoidable risk by factors beyond their control.

“When we previously highlighted potential safety issues in grounds and stadiums, the Sports Minister and I wrote to all the football authorities to urge them to be proactive on this and to make sure all their rules and regulations around player safety were fit for purpose.

“Again, whilst it is important that a proper investigation is allowed to conclude, we have to ensure that opportunities to make grounds safer for players have not been missed and that players don’t feel that serious incidents involving their safety are necessary to prompt change.”

Vigar had joined Arsenal‘s academy, on schoolboy terms, aged 14, before earning a full-time scholarship for the 2020/21 season.

He left the Premier League side in 2024 after making one appearance in the EFL Trophy.

The striker, who also had loan spells at Derby Under-21s and Eastbourne Borough, signed for Hastings before moving to Chichester last month.

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Blaze at asylum hotel being treated as hate crime

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A fire at a London hotel housing asylum seekers is being treated as a hate crime and has been condemned as a “despicable and cowardly attack”.

The blaze at the Thistle City Barbican Hotel, in Dingley Road, Islington, happened at about 22:50 BST on Wednesday, according to the Met Police. No-one was hurt and staff put out the flames before officers arrived.

The force said it was an isolated incident and it wanted to identify one suspect, while it was keeping an open mind about motive. There have been no arrests.

Islington Council leader, Una O’Halloran, and local MP Dame Emily Thornberry said: “We utterly condemn this despicable and cowardly attack that has no place in our community or society.”

Their statement added: “Islington is a proud beacon of tolerance and diversity that welcomes people from all over the world.”

Attempts to divide would fail, they said, adding that “this kind of violence can never be the answer”.

“Anyone who seeks to incite hatred or violence has no place in Islington,” they said.

The Met Police’s Cdr Hayley Sewart said: “This is being treated as a hate crime and we are working at pace to locate the suspect.”

The force is appealing for witnesses.

Nine people were arrested after a protest and counter-protest took place outside the hotel in August.

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Inquest hears friends’ accounts of student’s fatal fall at Cliffs of Moher

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A 20-year-old University of Edinburgh student slipped and fell to her death while walking on a muddy part of a trail beside the cliff edge at the Cliffs of Moher in May 2024, an inquest has heard.

At the Clare Coroner’s Court in Kilrush on Friday, eyewitness testimony of three college friends of Roxan Bastaens’ final moments before she fell was read out in evidence.

Members of her family had travelled to Kilrush for the inquest.

It heard that four female friends, two French, one Italian and Belgian national Bastaens had arrived at nearby Doolin the night before the incident with the intention of hiking in the area.

In her evidence, Italian-born college student, Guilia Bracchi said she was walking behind Bastaens when her friend fell.

“The trail was protected at the beginning, but later on it got slippery and there was no barrier,” she said.

Ms Bracchi said that conditions were calm and “we all had hiking boots on. It was not difficult. There were hundreds of people on the cliffs. The impression was that the trail was safe.”

Ms Bracchi said Bastaens had her camera in her hand and was looking at her steps as she walked around a big puddle.

She said she saw Bastaens’ foot going to the side where the trail was muddy and “she fell forward and she started tumbling down and I tried to catch her, but I couldn’t. It all happened so fast.”

Ms Bracchi added: “I looked down and I saw her hit off the cliffs twice and then she then went out of sight.” Moments later, she could see her friend’s body face down in the water.

Bastaens was weeks away from celebrating her 21st birthday.

County coroner Isobel O’Dea gave a verdict of “accidental death”. She told the family: “Unfortunately, we have a number of deaths at the Cliffs of Moher each year and this was an absolute accident.”

She said Bastaens’ blood sample was negative for any alcohol or drugs.

Ms O’Dea said that the postmortem found she died as a result of polytrauma as a result of a fall from a height. Bastaens’ death, she said, “would have been instantaneous and she wouldn’t have suffered”.

On August 22nd of last year, the Clare Local Development Company closed off large sections of the Cliffs of Moher trail, and they remain closed due to safety concerns.

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Bloody Sunday: Soldier F trial set to resume with witness evidence next week

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The trial of a former paratrooper accused of the murder of two men on Bloody Sunday in Derry in 1972 is set to resume next week.

The non-jury trial at Belfast Crown Court will hear evidence from three men who survived the shootings as well as civilian witnesses and former soldiers.

It comes after Judge Patrick Lynch on Wednesday ruled that key hearsay evidence can be admitted as evidence in his trial.

He granted an application by the prosecution to admit a number of statements made by other soldiers on the ground during the shootings on January 30th, 1972, which the defence had argued were not reliable.

Members of the Parachute Regiment shot dead 13 civilians in Derry on Bloody Sunday after a civil rights march.

Soldier F, who cannot be identified, is accused of murdering James Wray and William McKinney.

He is also charged with five attempted murders during the incident in the city’s Bogside area, namely of Joseph Friel, Michael Quinn, Joe Mahon, Patrick O’Donnell and a person unknown.

He has pleaded not guilty to the seven counts.

He sits in the courtroom behind a curtain during each day of the trial.

The court sat for a brief hearing on Friday, and heard that the trial will resume next Wednesday morning, and is expected to last between two to three weeks.

Bloody Sunday: Judge rules evidence against soldier charged is admissableOpens in new window ]

There was some discussion around witnesses being subjected to cross-examination, with Mark Mulholland KC, for the defence, arguing that they were “quite exhaustively questioned at the lower court”.

“After the various years of media, Saville [inquiry] sittings, being at the hearings, what has occurred even in the last few years of these proceedings, there is a risk of innocent contamination,” he said.

Judge Lynch said he thinks cross-examination should take “more or less its normal form”.

The trial will sit again next Wednesday.

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