Scottish Daily Mail

WHAT A TRAGIC WASTE

Devoted mother of two. Dedicated public servant. MP Jo Cox was a remarkable woman. Yesterday she was brutally murdered by a loner with a history of mental illness

- By Chris Greenwood, Chris Brooke and Andy Dolan

THE husband of an MP allegedly murdered by a troubled loner last night called on Britain to unite and ‘fight against the hatred that killed her’. Jo Cox, 41, was shot three times with a sawn-off shotgun

and stabbed repeatedly with a foot-long hunting knife in a frenzied attack.

The rising Labour star and dedicated MP died from catastroph­ic injuries as the killer ambushed her as she walked to her constituen­cy surgery at a West Yorkshire library. She was the first woman MP ever to be murdered and the first MP to be killed since the murder of Conservati­ve Ian Gow in a 1990 IRA bomb blast. Witnesses saw the gunman shout ‘put Britain first’ as he kicked, stabbed and then shot the slightly-built 5ft mother-oftwo with a sawn-off shotgun at almost point blank range.

Detectives were last night

questionin­g 52-year-old Thomas Mair, amid fears he was motivated by Mrs Cox’s political campaignin­g.

Dramatic pictures show a man being arrested only minutes after the attack in a nearby street.

There is unconfirme­d evidence Mair supported far-Right causes and claims that he had mental health problems and had been released recently from psychiatri­c care.

Mair was born in Kilmarnock, Ayrshire, in 1963, the same year his mother Mary married his father, James. The couple later divorced. It is not known when he moved south, but he had lived in Batley for more than 30 years.

Mrs Cox was an outspoken supporter of the Remain campaign and had called for more refugees to be given a safe haven on our shores.

Last night her husband, charity worker Brendan Cox, 37, said he would dedicate ‘every moment’ of the rest of his life to his wife’s memory. ‘I and Jo’s friends and family are going to work every moment of our lives to love and nurture our kids and to fight against the hate that killed Jo,’ he said.

‘Jo believed in a better world and she fought for it every day of her life with an energy, and a zest for life that would exhaust most people.

‘She would have wanted two things above all else to happen now: one, that our precious children are bathed in love and two, that we all unite to fight against the hatred that killed her. Hate doesn’t have a creed, race or religion, it is poisonous. Jo would have no regrets about her life, she lived every day of it to the full.’

The murder sent shockwaves across the country, with MPs across the political spectrum paying warm tribute to Mrs Cox.

Elected to represent Batley and Spen last year, the Cambridge University graduate had already earned great respect for her work ethic and humanitari­an campaignin­g.

David Cameron said the country has ‘lost a great star’ as the Leave and Remain camps suspended campaignin­g.

The murder took place outside Birstall Library in a busy shopping street just before 1pm. Mrs Cox was walking to a constituen­cy surgery – advertised on posters inside the building – after attending a school assembly about three miles away.

Witnesses said a man in a baseball cap grabbed her, pulling her hair as he punched and kicked her to the ground. As bystanders attempted to intervene, he pulled out a large hunting knife and repeatedly stabbed the MP, also catching a 77-year-old man who tried to intervene in the stomach.

He then pulled out a sawn-off shotgun which he fired three times from just a few feet away, aiming the final shot at her head. Clarke

‘He had a history of mental illness’

Rothwell, 42, said: ‘He was shouting “Put Britain first”. He shouted it about two or three times. He said it before he shot her and after he shot her.’

Britain First is the name of a Far Right group opposed to immigratio­n, multicultu­ralism and the UK’s membership of the EU. Its leader, former BNP councillor Paul Golding yesterday posted a video online saying the attack was ‘disgusting’.

Within minutes, police arrested Mair in a nearby street. Later they recovered the gun and a bloody machete-style knife. A team of officers were searching his council home, less than one mile away, where he has lived virtually all his life.

Neighbours said Mair, a volunteer gardener and special needs helper, was a regular visitor to the library where Mrs Cox held her surgery.

There is evidence he subscribed to a prowhite publicatio­n ‘SA Patriot’, an inflammato­ry magazine based in London.

But his brother Scott, 49, said his brother showed no strong political views. ‘He has a

history of mental illness, but he has had help,’ he said. The suspect’s mother, who also lives in Birstall, was being comforted by friends. One said: ‘She’s really upset. She’s blaming herself.’

Duane St Louis, 41, Mair’s half-brother, said he had obsessive compulsive disorder. At his home in Dewsbury, he said: ‘He’d clean himself with Brillo pads.’

Mrs Cox lived with her husband and two young children on a houseboat on the Thames. Before winning her seat last May she worked as an adviser for Gordon Brown’s wife, Sarah, and Lady Kinnock.

MPs warned they were in danger in a committee report last year which highlighte­d increasing complaints of obsessive stalkers. Several MPs complained they had been confronted by obsessives armed with knives and guns.

Last night, a vigil was held by colleagues outside Parliament and by friends and neighbours at Mrs Cox’s Thames houseboat.

 ??  ?? Gunned down in the street: Labour MP Jo Cox
Gunned down in the street: Labour MP Jo Cox

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