Daily Mirror

Wrong drugs risk to elderly

- BY MARTIN FRICKER martin.fricker@mirror.co.uk @martinfric­ker

FIVE people were murdered when a convenienc­e store was deliberate­ly blown up in a botched insurance scam, a court heard yesterday.

The explosion killed Mary Ragoobeer, 46, sons Shane, 18, and Sean, 17, and Shane’s girlfriend Leah Reek, 18, who were all in the flat above.

Shop worker Viktorija Ijevleva, 22, also died in the blast on February 25 which neighbours thought was a “bomb exploding”.

Business owner Aram

Kurd and friends Arkan Ali and Hawkar Hassan are accused of murder, manslaught­er and fraud.

They allegedly poured

“vast amounts” of petrol into Zabka Polish shop on Hinckley Road, Leicester, before sparking it with the intention of pocketing £300,000 on insurance.

Prosecutor David Herbert QC told Leicester crown court the defendants were motivated by “greed” and did not care about the victims.

Miss Ijevleva, Ali’s girlfriend, had alleg- TRAGIC edly “assisted” them in obtaining insurance. Mr Herbert said: “The defendants thought she knew too much and decided to leave her to die in the explosion. “The devastatio­n that they caused was created with the intention to kill. “They would have known that people were in the flat above the shop at the time, it was early on a Sunday evening. “That fact simply did not bother these defendants one bit.”

Scotty Ragoobeer, 15-yearold brother of Shane and Sean, was rescued from the rubble and survived. Passer-by Thomas Lindop, 56, was seriously injured.Jurors were told Ali, Hassan and Miss Ijevleva bought 26.6 litres of unleaded from a petrol station the day before the blast. CCTV showed Hassan allegedly filling a drum and paying in cash.

Ali, 37, of Oldham, Hassan, 33, of Coventry, and Kurd, 34, of Leicester, deny all charges. The trial continues TRAGIC Leah Reek, 18 HALF of older people are exposed to potentiall­y inappropri­ate drug prescribin­g, a study warns.

This includes intensifiy­ing existing drugs and not stopping or reducing doses after hospital stays.

The research also shows being in hospital was associated with increased risk.

Prof Tom Fahey, of the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, said: “Identifyin­g optimal management strategies is vital to ensure the risk is minimised after transition­s of care.”

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