Sat. May 10th, 2025


Emily Anderson

BBC News, Nottingham

Isaac Ashe

BBC News, East Midlands

PA Media Dr Kumar speaking to the media outside the Royal Court of Justice in London after a hearing into Valdo Calocane's sentencePA Media

Sanjoy Kumar said everyone affected by the attacks was “united” ahead of a judge-led public inquiry

The father of a student killed in the Nottingham attacks has said the survivors also deserve answers from a public inquiry into what happened.

Wayne Birkett, Sharon Miller and Marcin Gawronski were all seriously injured after Valdo Calocane hit them with a stolen van in the city centre on 13 June 2023.

Earlier that morning, he fatally stabbed students Barnaby Webber and Grace O’Malley-Kumar, both 19, and caretaker Ian Coates, 65.

Grace’s father, Sanjoy Kumar, described the pedestrians as “living victims” and said everyone affected by the attacks was “united” ahead of a judge-led public inquiry announced earlier in the year.

The head and shoulders of a man and a woman in a composite image

Ms Miller and Mr Birkett were on their way to work when Valdo Calocane carried out the attacks

Mr Birkett said: “I would have swapped my life for one of those poor students – without a doubt.

“It was awful hearing what happened to them [in the court case]. What happened to me was nothing compared to that.”

While Ms Miller added: “When I heard what had happened to Barnaby or Grace, I thought, ‘I wish he’d took me instead of them’.

“They were so young and still had their lives ahead of them – you just feel so guilty.”

Dr Kumar said: “We all within this process have a sense of guilt.

“I wasn’t there on the night to protect my daughter. There are all kinds of complex emotions from everyone who’s involved in this case.

“The families all suffer from a whole wide range of post-traumatic stress disorder and one of the characteristics is guilt.

“Our friends also suffer with guilt and feelings like survivors do – it’s really quite amazing how far-reaching the feelings of despair are.

“We are united in trying to find why these preventable attacks happened.”

Reuters Police officers search the area following a deadly attack in NottinghamReuters

Three people lost their lives but the impact of the Nottingham attacks is much further reaching

Calocane, who had been diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia before the attacks, was sentenced to a hospital order in January 2024 after admitting three counts of manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility and three counts of attempted murder.

The case has prompted a number of reviews, including a mental health homicide review commissioned by NHS England.

And earlier this year, Ms Miller and Mr Birkett, alongside the families of Mr Webber, Ms O’Malley-Kumar and Mr Coates, were invited to Downing Street to discuss plans for a judge-led public inquiry.

They both plan to engage fully with the inquiry, set to be chaired by Her Honour Deborah Taylor, and hope it will provide answers that lead to meaningful changes to help prevent similar incidents in the future.

Dr Kumar said: “Our children shouldn’t have died, there were failures across the system that were preventable.

“We are going to make sure that this inquiry is as wide-reaching as possible.”



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