The Sunday Post (Inverness)

We need to do more to help families when loved ones die abroad

- Hannah Bardell is Livingston MP and chairwoman of a cross-party Westminste­r group on deaths abroad

has now been just over a year since Kirsty Maxwell died after falling from a 10th-floor balcony in Benidorm.

Last week, I travelled to Spain to establish what more can be done to investigat­e her death but her tragic death has highlighte­d wider issues.

It is perhaps unusual for an MP to go abroad on constituen­cy business but I felt it was important for my constituen­ts, Kirsty’s family, and the goal we’re all after – which is improving the support for everyone put in this awful situation.

We met the UK ambassador to Spain, consular staff and the Spanish magistrate­s’ liaison officer.

Having these conversati­ons about improving the help for those whose loved ones die abroad has been invaluable.

We had a really positive reaction; there seemed to be a genuine interest in working out how they can do things better and this will help the work of the cross-party Westminste­r group on deaths abroad.

Getting this commitment to improve the processes in one of the most popular UK tourist destinatio­ns is important, if it helps just one family to stop going through the hell that Kirsty’s family went through then it will be worth it.

But I would say it was a real eye-opener in seeing how much demand there is on the UK Government staff in Spain on what I feel are its limited resources.

The British authoritie­s are committed to helping where they can in Kirsty’s case, I do have a real sense of that, and that is encouragin­g for me and her family.

More broadly they were very open about the gaps in their service and they acknowledg­e that in some aspects they need to work in a more co-ordinated way with other support services, and we talked about how a lot of the improvemen­ts can come in areas that don’t necessaril­y need a lot of money.

The conversati­on with the magistrate­s was also encouragin­g, and it is now about finding a way of getting that sort of knowledge – the legal side of deaths abroad in each country – into a better format for people to get access to and understand, often when they are at their most distressed.

Even if you take one issue, communicat­ing with families about the death – what happens now is really inconsiste­nt and there is no obligation to inform local police forces in the UK if someone from this country has died.

Throw into that mix the fact that people are often travelling in groups and social media is a challengin­g area but there’s much we can do.

This is a simple area where we can improve things and I think the ambassador and consulate staff recognise that.

I have spoken about getting Scottish authoritie­s more involved in this process, family liaison officers involved as standard when a Scot dies overseas, someone to guide you through those awful first few days.

For me, if we’re going to trial this then incidents in Spain seem to be the logical place to start given it is the most popular destinatio­n, and this is something we’ll now explore as we need to keep the momentum going on the issue of deaths abroad.

 ??  ?? Kirsty Maxwell died over a year ago
Kirsty Maxwell died over a year ago

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