The mother of one of the 22 people to die in the Manchester Arena terror attack has said ‘nothing has been learnt’ in dealing with extremism.
Figen Murray lost her son Martyn Hett in the May 2017 attack. In the aftermath, she has campaigned for ‘Martyn’s Law’ — which would see public spaces and local authorities forced to tighten their counter-terror planning and training. READ MORE: Scientists discover 'most common' symptom of Omicron variant of Covid-19 Now, as chapter 13 of the inquiry — the section examining the background and radicalisation of bomber Salman Abedi — Ms Murray has criticised the pace of change in counter-terror law. “Radicalisation destroys countless lives – those murdered in an attack, their loved ones, those scarred
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