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Does anyone know if a fund has been set up for the little girl shot in Stockwell last year?

14 replies

Spero · 28/03/2012 19:00

I have just read a very upsetting article in the Mail saying that her family are struggling, close to being evicted etc but no mention of where you can send any money. I will email the journalist but wondered if anyone had any info.

When she grew up she wanted to be a dancer. It is very sad.

OP posts:
Mopswerver · 28/03/2012 19:04

That's a very good point. Do post details on here if you find anything. I would assume they would get Criminal Injuries Compensation but I don't think it is a massive amount. That footage in the shop just tears me apart. Bless her.

Valpollicella · 28/03/2012 19:08

Yes there has... Cant link as on phone but check out the article in the london evrning standard from today online

Spero · 28/03/2012 19:10

Thanks, will do.

OP posts:
IndieSkies · 28/03/2012 19:15

There is a link on this page of the DM to the POlice fundraising initiative, It says "They have set up a bank account for donations with HSBC. The account name is The Thusha Appeal, the account number is 12239108 and the sort code is 40-07-30."

I can't imagine what it will have done to the family to have a child cut down like that, and to spend a whole year in hospital. The financial and practical imapct of that alone must be immense.

Is there comepnsation for victims of crime like that?

Poor poor girl.

crazynanna · 28/03/2012 19:21

I also think I heard on the news that 4 of the Police Officers' involved in the case are raising money by climbing a mountain.

Spero · 28/03/2012 19:23

Thanks indieskies, I have just found the same bank account via the sky news website, so that looks genuine.

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Spero · 28/03/2012 19:25

she should get some money from the Criminal Injuries Compensation Authority but I don't think the awards are very high and will certainly be no where near enough to get her what she needs.

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psammyad · 30/03/2012 15:53

This is a link to the Trident Police Team doing the Three Peaks Challenge in aid of Thusha's care

On the page it says:
"Our team consists of 15 people and we all come in various shapes, sizes and ages but all with the same aim, to finish the Three Peaks Challenge in 24 hours. The challenge involves walking up three of the highest mountains in Scotland, England and Wales as a fund raising event. We do not have a money target for this challenge as Thusha's care will be ongoing throughout her life and she will need constant medical care, attention and specialised equipment.

Please sponsor us in our quest to help Thusha and her family come to terms with what can only be described as one of the most devastating news that any parent can ever receive. Thusha will need financial help not only to help her through her childhood but through to teenage years and adulthood. No amount of money will be too small for our cause."

You can donate using Paypal as well as using the bank details, it doesn't seem to accept Giftaid but I think that may be because it's a fund not a charitable foundation.

margoandjerry · 30/03/2012 15:58

Yes there was something in the Evening Standard about it. I think the max they can get through criminal injuries compensation is £500k which, given she may need round the clock care, won't go very far. It's a terrible story. Interestingly, Nirpal Dhaliwal wrote quite a provocative but thoughtful piece about it in the ES. www.thisislondon.co.uk/comment/where-is-the-black-outrage-over-thushas-shooting-7599847.html

I thought it was a brave piece. There hasn't been much soul-searching about this of the type that happened post the boys murdered by the IRA a few years back in Warrington. Bad example because it's so old but I can't think of anything more recent off the cuff. Usually when children are caught up in this kind of horror there is a sense of public outrage but in this case it's been quite below the radar.

Spero · 31/03/2012 15:30

Thanks for the article link, that was worth reading and I agree with him.

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EdithWeston · 31/03/2012 15:43

It's been very much below the radar. Including here.

I searched MN on her (distinctive) first name. She is mentioned twice (as an example of innocent bystander) in threads discussing last year's riots.

And in this thread; that's it.

Poor child Sad

EdithWeston · 02/04/2012 17:45

I lifted th following from another website, and offer I here solely as food fo thought. I would also add that MN was up in arms abou the possibility that the mother of a rioter, and her dependent DD, might be evicted as a result his actions. But as OP points out, the family of a totally innocent victim of a Trident gun crime might face eviction has attracted neither attention nor outrage.

"Where is the black outrage over Thusha's shooting

"This week?s report into last summer?s riots found that the shooting of Mark Duggan was apparently the last straw for a black community under siege from the Met and its stop-and-search tactics. But this week has also seen the conviction of three young black men for shooting a five-year-old girl, Thusha Kamaleswaran, through the spine in an attempted gangland hit.

"The killing of a known criminal and gang member in Tottenham triggered an orgy of looting; many community leaders leapt to Duggan?s defence. Yet the paralysing of an innocent child hasn?t elicited a peep of condolence from such leaders, let alone outrage at those responsible. And not one pair of Nikes has been stolen in protest.

"The two cases highlight the hypocrisy that frames our discussion of race and crime. About a thousand people attended Duggan?s funeral, as though his death were akin to the assassination of Martin Luther King. How many of them will contribute to Thusha?s appeal fund as she contemplates life in a wheelchair?

"While there should be concern about and full accounting for any killing by the police, the black community should be more concerned about the chronic degree of gun crime committed by its own members ? a primary reason for the police being armed in the first place.

"Stabbings and shootings by black youths in London are regular occurrences. Yet the main effective means the police have of tackling them ? stopping and searching suspects ? is derided as racist and oppressive.

"Were stop-and-search to end, the black community would suffer most as the number of black victims would sky-rocket. This fact is lost amid the sanctimonious complaints from the likes of former City Hall race adviser Lee Jasper and Stafford Scott, a Tottenham-based race consultant. Both have made hay since the riots in their attempts to portray the police and society at large as racist.

"At times their double standards have been so blatant, it?s staggering. Interviewed on Radio 4 last year, Scott decried black MPs David Lammy and Diane Abbott thus: ?I see them as white people.? When historian David Starkey made a similar kind of accusation on Newsnight discussing the riots (?the whites have become black?), he was vilified. Scott, who?s black, wasn?t censured in the least. Funny, that.

"One amusing sight during the riots was of a young man wearing the uniform of the urban gangster ? a hoodie, gold teeth and jeans slung low, snarling war-dog in tow ? castigating the police in his patois for treating him with suspicion. It was a protest akin to donning a white coat and stethoscope and then complaining that you?ve been mistaken for a doctor.

"Rather than blaming society, such characters should criticise the gangster culture and its celebration of semi-literate, criminal machismo that undermines inner-city life.

"And they should march in the streets of Thusha?s Stockwell neighbourhood to shame the gang members, the people who value black lives cheapest. For black gun crime is a far more lethal menace to black people in London than the Metropolitan Police will ever be.

Thusha Appeal Fund: HSBC account number 12239108, sort code 40-07-30".

zany · 02/04/2012 21:14

Hi Mumsnet, I am very saddened that there has been very little comments/ discussion on Thusha's plight. This is a 5 year innocent girl that has been gunned down in a shop. Compared to all the outrage you often see here on in appropriate clothes for little girls, for inappropriate language etc etc there seems to be very little coverage here. I can't understand why, maybe it's because she is of Asian origin. I don't know. All I know is that it could have been any child. And as a society we should protect our children and we failed Thusha miserably. I for one will be writing to anyone who can help this poor innocent child. And I hope there will be more coverage here on Mumsnet to help with the fund raising. As the judge commented; this case has been one of the most heart breaking cases to pass through our courts.

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