
LONDON: Families of nine-year-old Keralite child Lissel Maria, who was shot in the head during a drive-by shooting in Hackney on May 29, fear that she may never be able to walk correctly or speak again. She is still receiving medical attention in a crucial issue.
Lissel was shot in a allegedly Greek rival gang shooting outside a Greek shop in Evin. Her families, Vinaya and Ajeesh, who are both IT professionals employed in the UK and from Gothuruth in Ernakulam, claimed they had visited the shop because Lissel wanted an ice cream. Our daughter is secure but in a critical issue, they said in a statement released via Metropolitan Police.” We are devastated about what has happened.
We are unsure whether we will always get our daughter back to being the intelligent, funny girl she was before or whether she will ever be able to speak or move normally once more because she only went there for an ice cream. We need our child again, and we are all praying for her complete recovery.
The bicycle rider also shot three people who were sitting outside the cafe, aged 37, 42, and 44. Since then, they have been released from the hospital. One of the people, who was the intended destination, is alleged to be a part of the Hackney Bombers group. A foe group, the Tottenham Turks, is suspected to be behind the strike. In London, both groups are in charge of the drug industry.
There have n’t been any arrests so far. Police issued new pictures of the suspect who was riding a stolen motorcycle from Wembley in 2021 this month as part of a new information appeal.
Detective chief director James Conway, guide for police in Hackney, said:” At this time, a critical series of investigation has been the possible link to Turkish-originating organised legal networks”. He urged the general public to” seek their hearts” to find out if their commitment to friends or associates includes” covering up for an honest baby being shot” as well.
The director of Tottenham Turks, Izzet Eren, was shot dead outside a café in Moldova’s capital last year, according to the Daily Telegraph, in what is thought to be a punishment strike for this firing.
The Metropolitan Police are aware of studies of a 41-year-old man’s death in Chisinau, according to a spokeswoman for Scotland Yard. The name of the man who died has not yet been formally confirmed by the Moldovan government.