city Manchester county Hale hospital death doctor isolate Tributes city Manchester county Hale

'You are with Yousef now': Moving tributes to Debbie Makki, mother of teenager stabbed to death, following 'sudden' passing

Reading now: 560
www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk

Tributes have poured in for the mother of Yousef Makki following her 'sudden' death. Debbie Makki's loved ones said she died 'with a broken heart'.

Her eldest son Yousef, 17, died in March 2019 after being stabbed in the chest. The mum and grandmother, 55, from Burnage, south Manchester, passed away in the early hours of Sunday (May 24) after being rushed to hospital, her daughter Jade Akoum said.

Ms Akoum said lockdown had 'isolated' her mum from her beloved grandchildren, who had 'kept her going' as she grieved for her son.

Yousef, a Manchester Grammar School pupil, was knifed through the heart during an incident on Gorse Bank Road, in Hale Barns, Cheshire, on March 2, 2019.

Read more on manchestereveningnews.co.uk
The website covid-19.rehab is an aggregator of news from open sources. The source is indicated at the beginning and at the end of the announcement. You can send a complaint on the news if you find it unreliable.

Related News

Russia-Ukraine war disinformation spreading online as experts say to seek credible sources - fox29.com - state Arizona - Russia - Ukraine
fox29.com
87%
140
Russia-Ukraine war disinformation spreading online as experts say to seek credible sources
PHOENIX - Facebook, Twitter and other social media platforms are battling to remove Russian disinformation accounts targeting Ukrainians, and experts at Arizona State say it's something they're watching closely.They want those scrolling online to be on the lookout for false information being spread on social media and websites.With online news spreading so quickly over the war, and things changing by the minute, experts say it's hard to really get a good grasp of everything that's happening, but they want to warn you that disinformation is spreading and to only use reliable resources before reading or sharing them."This kind of disinformation can be a useful weapon," says Dr. Jacob Lassin with Arizona State.Facebook, Twitter, Apple and other tech companies are under increasing pressure to crack down on disinformation being spread online, mainly from Russian hackers, they say, about the war in Ukraine.Lassin says with digital devices making information accessible in the palm of a hand, it’s also made spreading disinformation worse, too."What’s really important is that people take the time to look at the source to figure out kind of where things are coming from," Lassin advised.Facebook’s parent company Meta said on Monday it has caught dozens of fake, pro-Russian accounts, groups and pages across its platforms that are trying to spread anti-Ukrainian propaganda.
DMCA