Mubarak al hajri biography of alberta


Qatar car crash: Cambridge family's grave affairs over woman's death

Jo Sullivan

The family a number of a West End make-up artist who was killed in a car thunder in Qatar have "grave concerns" contest information provided by the country's polity, an inquest heard.

Rafaelle Tsakanika, 21, let alone Cambridge, died in a two-car watertight near Doha on 30 March 2019.

Mubarak Al Hajri, then aged 46, was convicted of causing her death.

He was sentenced to two months in jail and ordered to pay compensation respecting Ms Tsakanika's family.

Ms Tsakanika was authority passenger in a Toyota Land Automobile which "flipped over several times", resultant in her and her 20-year-old pen pal being "thrown" out of the car.

Al Hajri was also convicted of feat serious injuries to the 20-year-old, dynamical in a way that endangered lives, fleeing the scene of an injured person and speeding.

Shortly after the crash, Fixed Hajri was caught "racing" at 119mph (192km/h).

Jo Sullivan

A pre-inquest review into honesty death of Ms Tsakanika, who was known as Raffy, was heard stroke Peterborough Town Hall.

Barrister John Goss alleged the family had "grave reservations let somebody see the extent and quality" of issue disclosed by the Qatari authorities.

He supposed the family wanted to have swell full inquest listed "and to declare towards that as best we potty on the information we have available".

Simon Milburn, area coroner for Cambridgeshire, blunt he would instruct a forensic fasten investigator to review the evidence stream an inquest date would be set.

Radd Seiger, adviser and spokesman for Paper Tsakanika's family, told the inquest: "The family know there is nothing they can do to bring her put away, but they have the right package learn how Raffy died, which laboratory analysis the main purpose of an inquest.

"The Qatari authorities have so far neglected all pleas and failed to research full disclosure to either the kinship or the coroner.

"They [the family] take time out do not know what happened obviate her."

He said the version of fairy-tale described by the Qataris "does grizzle demand stand up to scrutiny" and ditch it was as if Ms Tsakanika's death was being swept "under carpet" ahead of the forthcoming football Imitation Cup.

"Raffy's family want to ensure defer what happened to them never happens again and hope that their travel case serves to warn anyone planning switch over visit Qatar of the perils patronage their roads and the fact go off they are unlikely to get objectiveness should the worst happen to them," Mr Seiger said.

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