Daily Mail

The untouchabl­es

Why the bodies of Manchester bomber and Ian Brady have STILL not been buried

- By Liz Hull and Richard Marsden

THE remains of Moors murderer Ian Brady and Manchester suicide bomber Salman Abedi are being kept at the same mortuary – more than two months after their deaths.

The location of the facility, dubbed the ‘monster morgue’, is being kept secret to prevent revenge attacks by members of the public outraged by both killers’ vile crimes.

Manchester City Council is refusing to allow local crematoriu­ms to take the remains of Abedi, who killed 22 people when he blew himself up at an Ariana Grande concert at Manchester Arena on May 22.

No relatives were present at the opening of an inquest into the 22-year-old’s death and it is possible his remains will be sent to Libya, his parents’ homeland.

Last night a council spokesman said: ‘ Under no circumstan­ces would we allow the body of the perpetrato­r of the heinous attack on Manchester Arena to be bur- ied or cremated in Manchester.’ Although Brady’s body has been released to his solicitor, it has still not been moved from the mortuary.

The child killer is expected to be cremated and his ashes scattered in his native Glasgow, but so far no funeral directors willing to handle his remains have been found.

Glasgow councillor­s have also refused to let either of its two crematoriu­ms take on the job. A source said: ‘The pair of them are effectivel­y in limbo. Funeral directors don’t want them. No crematoriu­m wants to process them. In the meantime they’re stuck in the monster morgue.

‘It may give some tiny crumb of comfort to relatives and friends of those whose lives they destroyed to know they are in anonymous purgatory.’

Brady and his accomplice Myra Hindley tortured and murdered five children in the 1960s before burying their bodies on Saddlewort­h Moor, near Manchester.

The 79-year-old died of a chronic lung condition at the high-security Ashworth Hospital in Merseyside, where he had been detained for the past 32 years, on May 15.

His body was sent to an undisclose­d morgue before being released into the care of his solicitor, Robin Makin, who was the last person to speak to him. Last night Mr Makin declined to comment on the latest revelation­s and a date for an inquest into Brady’s death has yet to be set.

However, many undertaker­s said they would not want to handle the murderer’s remains. One funeral director in Liverpool told the Daily Mail that they had a ‘duty’ to look after their customers.

Hindley was cremated in secret following her death from cancer aged 60 in November 2002, but only after the Prison Service recruited an undertaker 200 miles away to do the job.

Last night Michael Fogg, a funeral director from Sheffield, praised colleagues for refusing to handle the bodies of Brady and Abedi, the Daily Star reported.

In a Facebook post he said the pair should be left to ‘rot in hell’. He said: ‘Thank you to every funeral director in the country. We all need to stand together and say: “No.” ’

Meanwhile a Manchester council source said: ‘Just like Ian Brady, every effort is going into making sure there is not a chance Abedi can be buried or cremated in Greater Manchester.’

Last night senior Manchester coroner John Ward said it was up to Abedi’s family to make any arrangemen­ts for his remains.

 ??  ?? Child killer: Ian Brady
Child killer: Ian Brady
 ??  ?? Bomber: Salman Abedi
Bomber: Salman Abedi

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