A mother spoke of her shock on Thursday after her estranged husband killed their 11-year-old son at cricket practice before being shot dead by police in front of horrified onlookers in suburban Australia.
Luke Batty was beaten, reportedly with a cricket bat to the head, soon after training with his junior team on Wednesday evening at the Tyabb oval on the Mornington Peninsula, 100km southeast of Melbourne.
He suffered significant injuries and died at the scene. Reports said he was also stabbed, although this could not be confirmed.
Police said they arrived to find the father Greg, 54, armed with a knife. When capsicum, or pepper spray failed to subdue him, he was shot once in the chest.
The man was airlifted to hospital but died early on Thursday.
Mother traumatised
The tragedy left mother Rosie Batty, originally from Britain, traumatised. She was just metres away when the attack took place.
She told reporters her estranged husband had a history of mental illness and was the subject of an apprehended violence order, but it allowed him to visit the boy at his cricket training.
"It was just a little cricket practice. There was people there, I believed he was safe," she said, adding that there were no signs he would ever hurt their son - their only child.
"Luke came to me and said, 'Could I have a few more minutes with my dad?' because he doesn't see him very often and I said, 'Sure, OK."
She added: "I'm still dealing with disbelief. I want to tell everybody that family violence happens to everybody no matter how nice your house is, no matter how intelligent you are, it happens to anyone and everyone and this has been an 11-year battle."
Luke Batty was beaten, reportedly with a cricket bat to the head, soon after training with his junior team on Wednesday evening at the Tyabb oval on the Mornington Peninsula, 100km southeast of Melbourne.
He suffered significant injuries and died at the scene. Reports said he was also stabbed, although this could not be confirmed.
Police said they arrived to find the father Greg, 54, armed with a knife. When capsicum, or pepper spray failed to subdue him, he was shot once in the chest.
The man was airlifted to hospital but died early on Thursday.
Mother traumatised
The tragedy left mother Rosie Batty, originally from Britain, traumatised. She was just metres away when the attack took place.
She told reporters her estranged husband had a history of mental illness and was the subject of an apprehended violence order, but it allowed him to visit the boy at his cricket training.
"It was just a little cricket practice. There was people there, I believed he was safe," she said, adding that there were no signs he would ever hurt their son - their only child.
"Luke came to me and said, 'Could I have a few more minutes with my dad?' because he doesn't see him very often and I said, 'Sure, OK."
She added: "I'm still dealing with disbelief. I want to tell everybody that family violence happens to everybody no matter how nice your house is, no matter how intelligent you are, it happens to anyone and everyone and this has been an 11-year battle."
No comments:
Post a Comment