Rosdeep Kular's 'fairy tale - no doubt inspired by tragic Madeleine's story'
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Rosdeep Kular's 'fairy tale - no doubt inspired by tragic Madeleine's story'
Edinburgh Evening News
Sandra Dick: Sickening end to Mikaeel Kular story
Hundreds joined the search for Mikaeel Kular which ultimately ended in heartbreaking fashion and vigils in the city, below. Picture: Esme Allen
by Sandra Dick
26 July 2014
THE list of his injuries is heartbreaking, horrifying, stomach churning, so extensive that the thought of what his little body endured over two terrifying days at the hands of his own flesh and blood becomes the stuff of nightmares.
Forty separate injuries, one which caused his bowel to rupture.
What did Mikaeel Kular do to be so dreadfully punished? Oh yes, he ate too much. Distressing details of the terrible beating he endured at the hands of his mother emerged in court yesterday, a sickening final chapter to a truly hellish episode, which on the one hand drew a community together in a way which revealed the very best of human nature, and on the other, revealed inhumanity at its worst. News that Mikaeel had gone missing from his Ferry Gait Crescent home last January had sent a tidal wave of shock across north Edinburgh and beyond. Thoughts turned to Madeleine McCann, plucked from bed on holiday in Portugal, not to be seen again.
Surely that couldn’t happen here in Edinburgh? We all held our children’s hands a little tighter – even those among us who weren’t immediate neighbours, who didn’t live close by Mikaeel’s home, we all felt Mikaeel’s loss. Where could he be? Of course the one person on earth who knew the answer to that was also the one whose every fibre of being, whose every heartbeat should have been focused on keeping her little boy safe, well and happy. Instead the distressing details of the relentless beating Mikaeel endured revealed that far from a loving mother in the deepest torture over where her little boy could be, Rosdeep Adekoya was a scheming, conniving child beater, whose main thought as her son lay dead in a suitcase was of protecting herself by playing the role of grief-stricken parent. She told her lies while strangers gave up their time to trudge streets and parkland, hour after hour, mile after mile, desperately looking for the son she knew was already dead. And as the community came together in a force of nature unlike anyone could have imagined – sharing hopes, gathering in community centres, shedding tears and marching on fuelled with snacks and drinks from shopkeepers and neighbours – Adekoya’s pack of lies crumbled.
Today we know what happened. The question that haunts many now is how COULD she do it? How could a mother not only break that deeply woven maternal bond that begins when she discovers she is pregnant, that multiples and grows with her swollen tummy and finally explodes in that overwhelming adoration that feels like nothing on earth can feel as you hold your baby in your arms for the first time, then go on to beat them to a pulp and chuck away their body like a piece of rubbish to rot? Why? Few reading the details of Mikaeel’s final hours could possibly feel much sympathy for his mother in spite of the fine words of her defence counsel Brian McConnachie QC. “Rosdeep Adekoya is not a monster,” he told the court. “It appears she is basically a young mother with a number of underlying problems.”
Let’s look for a moment at Adekoya’s woes. She lost her father aged 19, the court was told. Grief is an awful thing, as many of us who have endured the loss of a parent know. Many, however, find that very distinctive kind of loss makes them appreciate family even more. They say ‘I love you’ to their children a bit more often, hug them a little more. Adekoya had broken up with Mikaeel’s father, but was that a pathetic attempt to shift the blame for her vile actions onto someone else? She is, let’s remember, a 34-year-old mother, mature and with responsibilities, beyond the stage surely of playing the role of dippy lovelorn teenager. And Adekoya had been prescribed anti-depressants at one point and complained of long-standing depression, stress and anxiety. If true, then perhaps we should ask why her medical problems were not being dealt with adequately. Then we should reflect on the fact that many with these conditions would not for a second think of laying their hands, never mind their fists, on a toddler. Tellingly, psychiatrists who examined her concluded she was “possibly suffering from a mild to moderate depressive disorder at the time of Mikaeel’s death”, not enough to be unfit to stand trial.
What tipped this trainee beautician – perhaps another clue as to where Adekoya’s shallow interests lay – into a prolonged and vicious beating was something that most of us cannot for a second relate to.
Mikaeel, she complained, had committed the terrible sin of overeating on a trip out. As he got ready for bed, he vomited. Most worn-out parents might well inwardly sigh at the thought of having to clean up or find a change of clothes. Then give their child a hug as being sick when you’re three is pretty rubbish and upsetting. Instead Adekoya ‘comforted’ Mikaeel by whacking him with her open hand and thumping him with her clenched fist. She beat, hammered and pummelled his tiny body. Then she did it again and again. She may not have intended to kill him. But if she had stopped and thought for a second about his wellbeing, she could have saved his young life. His injuries, while severe, could have been treated. Instead she let him suffer and die. Too absorbed in what would happen to her if his bruises were spotted – she didn’t care. Like a sack of old rubbish, she stuffed his little broken body into a suitcase, drove to Kirkcaldy and ditched him in a wood. Of course police had to believe what she was saying, maybe someone did break in and whisk him away. Perhaps a spurned lover, family friend, opportunist passer-by or some drugged up weirdo really was to blame.
Mikaeel had to be found.
What Adekoya didn’t consider as she wove her fairy tale – no doubt inspired by tragic Madeleine’s story – was the phenomenal wave of unity and determination that would engulf the community. Young, old, mothers with toddlers the same age as Mikaeel who pushed buggies mile after mile, searching, and grandparents who saw their own beloved youngsters in his deep brown eyes. They all came. Mikaeel might have had a darker shade of skin than many who joined the search, but what was patently obvious was it mattered not a jot. He was their child too and this single, powerful force of nature had no intention of just letting him go. Hour after hour, mile after mile, day after desperate day, they gathered to help.They searched perhaps fearful of what they might find yet driven by an unstoppable sense of humanity and simple care – qualities which had clearly deserted his own mother – for a defenceless little boy. As it transpired, any one of these strangers would have given Mikaeel more protection, safety, and quite probably, love, than his mother. The hours passed and the knot in the stomach grew tighter. Mikaeel, we were told, had been wearing his turquoise pyjamas with the dinosaur print – a tiny, poignant detail that made his disappearance all the more real.
Suddenly the police photograph that showed off his cheeky, broad smile grew in our mind’s eye into a full length little boy, cute in his pyjamas with the cartoon dinosaur, washed, teeth brushed, smelling of mint and baby powder, ready for the safest place on earth – his own bed. News his body had been found was delivered by a clearly choked Assistant Chief Constable Malcolm Graham to groans of despair from those who had gathered hoping for good news. He paid tribute – rightly – to the “fantastic” response of the local community. “Without such vital assistance,” he said, “the police could not do their job.” Today Mikaeel’s mother is facing years behind bars. Not a future anyone would choose, but more than her little boy has. All we have now is the memory of Mikaeel’s smile, a tighter, stronger community and, while of little comfort, the knowledge that no-one can possibly hurt him now.
http://www.edinburghnews.scotsman.com/news/crime/sandra-dick-sickening-end-to-mikaeel-kular-story-1-3489555
Sandra Dick: Sickening end to Mikaeel Kular story
Hundreds joined the search for Mikaeel Kular which ultimately ended in heartbreaking fashion and vigils in the city, below. Picture: Esme Allen
by Sandra Dick
26 July 2014
THE list of his injuries is heartbreaking, horrifying, stomach churning, so extensive that the thought of what his little body endured over two terrifying days at the hands of his own flesh and blood becomes the stuff of nightmares.
Forty separate injuries, one which caused his bowel to rupture.
What did Mikaeel Kular do to be so dreadfully punished? Oh yes, he ate too much. Distressing details of the terrible beating he endured at the hands of his mother emerged in court yesterday, a sickening final chapter to a truly hellish episode, which on the one hand drew a community together in a way which revealed the very best of human nature, and on the other, revealed inhumanity at its worst. News that Mikaeel had gone missing from his Ferry Gait Crescent home last January had sent a tidal wave of shock across north Edinburgh and beyond. Thoughts turned to Madeleine McCann, plucked from bed on holiday in Portugal, not to be seen again.
Surely that couldn’t happen here in Edinburgh? We all held our children’s hands a little tighter – even those among us who weren’t immediate neighbours, who didn’t live close by Mikaeel’s home, we all felt Mikaeel’s loss. Where could he be? Of course the one person on earth who knew the answer to that was also the one whose every fibre of being, whose every heartbeat should have been focused on keeping her little boy safe, well and happy. Instead the distressing details of the relentless beating Mikaeel endured revealed that far from a loving mother in the deepest torture over where her little boy could be, Rosdeep Adekoya was a scheming, conniving child beater, whose main thought as her son lay dead in a suitcase was of protecting herself by playing the role of grief-stricken parent. She told her lies while strangers gave up their time to trudge streets and parkland, hour after hour, mile after mile, desperately looking for the son she knew was already dead. And as the community came together in a force of nature unlike anyone could have imagined – sharing hopes, gathering in community centres, shedding tears and marching on fuelled with snacks and drinks from shopkeepers and neighbours – Adekoya’s pack of lies crumbled.
Today we know what happened. The question that haunts many now is how COULD she do it? How could a mother not only break that deeply woven maternal bond that begins when she discovers she is pregnant, that multiples and grows with her swollen tummy and finally explodes in that overwhelming adoration that feels like nothing on earth can feel as you hold your baby in your arms for the first time, then go on to beat them to a pulp and chuck away their body like a piece of rubbish to rot? Why? Few reading the details of Mikaeel’s final hours could possibly feel much sympathy for his mother in spite of the fine words of her defence counsel Brian McConnachie QC. “Rosdeep Adekoya is not a monster,” he told the court. “It appears she is basically a young mother with a number of underlying problems.”
Let’s look for a moment at Adekoya’s woes. She lost her father aged 19, the court was told. Grief is an awful thing, as many of us who have endured the loss of a parent know. Many, however, find that very distinctive kind of loss makes them appreciate family even more. They say ‘I love you’ to their children a bit more often, hug them a little more. Adekoya had broken up with Mikaeel’s father, but was that a pathetic attempt to shift the blame for her vile actions onto someone else? She is, let’s remember, a 34-year-old mother, mature and with responsibilities, beyond the stage surely of playing the role of dippy lovelorn teenager. And Adekoya had been prescribed anti-depressants at one point and complained of long-standing depression, stress and anxiety. If true, then perhaps we should ask why her medical problems were not being dealt with adequately. Then we should reflect on the fact that many with these conditions would not for a second think of laying their hands, never mind their fists, on a toddler. Tellingly, psychiatrists who examined her concluded she was “possibly suffering from a mild to moderate depressive disorder at the time of Mikaeel’s death”, not enough to be unfit to stand trial.
What tipped this trainee beautician – perhaps another clue as to where Adekoya’s shallow interests lay – into a prolonged and vicious beating was something that most of us cannot for a second relate to.
Mikaeel, she complained, had committed the terrible sin of overeating on a trip out. As he got ready for bed, he vomited. Most worn-out parents might well inwardly sigh at the thought of having to clean up or find a change of clothes. Then give their child a hug as being sick when you’re three is pretty rubbish and upsetting. Instead Adekoya ‘comforted’ Mikaeel by whacking him with her open hand and thumping him with her clenched fist. She beat, hammered and pummelled his tiny body. Then she did it again and again. She may not have intended to kill him. But if she had stopped and thought for a second about his wellbeing, she could have saved his young life. His injuries, while severe, could have been treated. Instead she let him suffer and die. Too absorbed in what would happen to her if his bruises were spotted – she didn’t care. Like a sack of old rubbish, she stuffed his little broken body into a suitcase, drove to Kirkcaldy and ditched him in a wood. Of course police had to believe what she was saying, maybe someone did break in and whisk him away. Perhaps a spurned lover, family friend, opportunist passer-by or some drugged up weirdo really was to blame.
Mikaeel had to be found.
What Adekoya didn’t consider as she wove her fairy tale – no doubt inspired by tragic Madeleine’s story – was the phenomenal wave of unity and determination that would engulf the community. Young, old, mothers with toddlers the same age as Mikaeel who pushed buggies mile after mile, searching, and grandparents who saw their own beloved youngsters in his deep brown eyes. They all came. Mikaeel might have had a darker shade of skin than many who joined the search, but what was patently obvious was it mattered not a jot. He was their child too and this single, powerful force of nature had no intention of just letting him go. Hour after hour, mile after mile, day after desperate day, they gathered to help.They searched perhaps fearful of what they might find yet driven by an unstoppable sense of humanity and simple care – qualities which had clearly deserted his own mother – for a defenceless little boy. As it transpired, any one of these strangers would have given Mikaeel more protection, safety, and quite probably, love, than his mother. The hours passed and the knot in the stomach grew tighter. Mikaeel, we were told, had been wearing his turquoise pyjamas with the dinosaur print – a tiny, poignant detail that made his disappearance all the more real.
Suddenly the police photograph that showed off his cheeky, broad smile grew in our mind’s eye into a full length little boy, cute in his pyjamas with the cartoon dinosaur, washed, teeth brushed, smelling of mint and baby powder, ready for the safest place on earth – his own bed. News his body had been found was delivered by a clearly choked Assistant Chief Constable Malcolm Graham to groans of despair from those who had gathered hoping for good news. He paid tribute – rightly – to the “fantastic” response of the local community. “Without such vital assistance,” he said, “the police could not do their job.” Today Mikaeel’s mother is facing years behind bars. Not a future anyone would choose, but more than her little boy has. All we have now is the memory of Mikaeel’s smile, a tighter, stronger community and, while of little comfort, the knowledge that no-one can possibly hurt him now.
http://www.edinburghnews.scotsman.com/news/crime/sandra-dick-sickening-end-to-mikaeel-kular-story-1-3489555
tasprin- Posts : 834
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Re: Rosdeep Kular's 'fairy tale - no doubt inspired by tragic Madeleine's story'
I think Lazzeri's getting a bit frustrated and cross now!
http://l-azzeri-lies-in-the-sun.com/Child_Murdering_Bastards.html
http://l-azzeri-lies-in-the-sun.com/Child_Murdering_Bastards.html
Doug D- Posts : 3719
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Re: Rosdeep Kular's 'fairy tale - no doubt inspired by tragic Madeleine's story'
Thoughts turned to Madeleine McCann, plucked from bed on holiday in Portugal, not to be seen again.
Plucked? Is that a milder form of "Abducted"?
maebee- Madeleine Foundation
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Re: Rosdeep Kular's 'fairy tale - no doubt inspired by tragic Madeleine's story'
What Adekoya didn’t consider as she wove her fairy tale – no doubt inspired by tragic Madeleine’s story – was the phenomenal wave of unity and determination that would engulf the community
"Fairy tale" needs to be inserted twice in this article - right after "tragic Madeleine's".
maebee- Madeleine Foundation
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Re: Rosdeep Kular's 'fairy tale - no doubt inspired by tragic Madeleine's story'
I live about 20 miles from where this happened and the day it was reported I was in the gym, watching it on the TV. 4 of us were training together, and I said, " bet you anything you like it was either the father or the mother that has killed him". We all agreed. Funny how the statistics of these incidents works out...except when ,apparantly, a 3 year old little girl goes "missing" while on holiday. Then all the evidence and the laws of probability go out of the window and the realms of fantasy take over.
Sam S- Posts : 86
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Re: Rosdeep Kular's 'fairy tale - no doubt inspired by tragic Madeleine's story'
Sam S wrote:I live about 20 miles from where this happened and the day it was reported I was in the gym, watching it on the TV. 4 of us were training together, and I said, " bet you anything you like it was either the father or the mother that has killed him". We all agreed. Funny how the statistics of these incidents works out...except when ,apparantly, a 3 year old little girl goes "missing" while on holiday. Then all the evidence and the laws of probability go out of the window and the realms of fantasy take over.
Statistics does not lie, yet we have mcs case stated as exception.
Exception to what, even the Police haven't figured that out yet.
aiyoyo- Posts : 9610
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Re: Rosdeep Kular's 'fairy tale - no doubt inspired by tragic Madeleine's story'
yeah, straight away thought that was someone who knew him sadly. On the statistics, the Huntley case opened my eyes to just how quickly these people carry out what they do. I was really shocked by that. By the time this case came along I was immediately doubtful MM would be found. (IF she had been abducted)
sar- Posts : 1335
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Re: Rosdeep Kular's 'fairy tale - no doubt inspired by tragic Madeleine's story'
I don't know if this journalist has a history of nauseating McCann stories; I've never heard of her.
I wonder if her brief references to Madeleine are intended to remind people that the majority of child abductors / killers are known to their victims.
I wonder if her brief references to Madeleine are intended to remind people that the majority of child abductors / killers are known to their victims.
Guest- Guest
Re: Rosdeep Kular's 'fairy tale - no doubt inspired by tragic Madeleine's story'
"Adekoya had been prescribed anti-depressants at one point and complained of long-standing depression, stress and anxiety. If true, then perhaps we should ask why her medical problems were not being dealt with adequately. Then we should reflect on the fact that many with these conditions would not for a second think of laying their hands, never mind their fists, on a toddler."
The writer is over looking those psychological problems where a parent idolises one child but sees another as a problem child who deserves to have all their frustrations taken out on them. Border line personality disorder is one of these and the people who have it will often not admit to needing help or that they have a problem.
I doubt this mother only beat this child after the vomiting incident, she had googled things about 'not loving one child' etc. There are mothers that dislike one particular child, either haven't bonded with them or their can't accept their 'difficult' behaviour. Of course this false abduction story has parallels with the McCann case but not just because of the abduction part IMO.
The writer is over looking those psychological problems where a parent idolises one child but sees another as a problem child who deserves to have all their frustrations taken out on them. Border line personality disorder is one of these and the people who have it will often not admit to needing help or that they have a problem.
I doubt this mother only beat this child after the vomiting incident, she had googled things about 'not loving one child' etc. There are mothers that dislike one particular child, either haven't bonded with them or their can't accept their 'difficult' behaviour. Of course this false abduction story has parallels with the McCann case but not just because of the abduction part IMO.
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Re: Rosdeep Kular's 'fairy tale - no doubt inspired by tragic Madeleine's story'
Lets not forget the Shannon Matthews case. Personally I think the McCanns were the inspiration for that fracas.
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SENTENCED
11 YEARS
(for killing him and then making a false allegation of abduction / missing / etc etc)
(for killing him and then making a false allegation of abduction / missing / etc etc)
Re: Rosdeep Kular's 'fairy tale - no doubt inspired by tragic Madeleine's story'
Does not seem right does it, out in 5 yrs maybe....... still young enough to have a life ?PeterMac wrote:11 YEARS
(for killing him and then making a false allegation of abduction / missing / etc etc)
jozi- Posts : 710
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Breakdown of sentence
http://www.scotland-judiciary.org.uk/8/1302/HMA-v-ROSDEEP-ADEKOYA
and elsewhere
Almost word for word what St Katherine is saying in Portugal.
They say they suffer 'permanent anxiety, insomnia, lack of appetite, irritability and an indefinable fear'.
The writ also says Kate McCann is 'steeped in a deep and serious depression'.
Are the twins therefore at risk ?
In addition, by your pretence that Mikaeel had gone missing you caused a massive manhunt to be undertaken, involving both the emergency services and the public. I accept that this was not planned and that you simply panicked when you realised that Mikaeel was dead. But this too, as your counsel recognised, is a serious matter.
Had it not been for your early plea of guilty to the reduced charge, and the indication at an even earlier stage that such a plea would be forthcoming, I would have sentenced you to 13 years imprisonment for the culpable homicide and a further two years for the attempt to defeat the ends of justice. That would have been 15 years in all.
and elsewhere
Both the Social Work Report and the psychological report make it clear that you have suffered from depression for some time, and particularly in the last few months before Mikaeel’s death. This has been characterised by a low mood, stress and lack of motivation. You have found yourself overwhelmed by your circumstances, without any adequate coping strategies.
Almost word for word what St Katherine is saying in Portugal.
They say they suffer 'permanent anxiety, insomnia, lack of appetite, irritability and an indefinable fear'.
The writ also says Kate McCann is 'steeped in a deep and serious depression'.
Are the twins therefore at risk ?
Re: Rosdeep Kular's 'fairy tale - no doubt inspired by tragic Madeleine's story'
Rosdeep Adekoya: 'Demon' killer mother of Edinburgh toddler Mikaeel Kular could be released after seven years behind bars
https://www.fifetoday.co.uk/news/crime/rosdeep-adekoya-demon-killer-mother-of-edinburgh-toddler-mikaeel-kular-could-be-released-after-seven-years-behind-bars-3141687?fbclid=IwAR0v-Ia1oy3yE9cl1lqUy3UThmyeMRV2wkwiduSQWsOuqsheaWNgJ-VEZcQ
An Edinburgh mother who killed her toddler and hid his body in a suitcase could be freed from prison in two months.
https://www.fifetoday.co.uk/news/crime/rosdeep-adekoya-demon-killer-mother-of-edinburgh-toddler-mikaeel-kular-could-be-released-after-seven-years-behind-bars-3141687?fbclid=IwAR0v-Ia1oy3yE9cl1lqUy3UThmyeMRV2wkwiduSQWsOuqsheaWNgJ-VEZcQ
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