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Craig McQuillian: Courier captured on CCTV trying to burn down Edinburgh flat with man and boy inside | UK News

A courier who tried to kill a young boy and a man by setting a fire outside their door within a high-rise block of flats has been jailed for six years.

Craig McQuillian, 44, was captured on camera starting the petrol blaze on the 10th floor of the 14-storey tenement in Edinburgh.

A court heard a youngster inside the flat smelled burning while in bed and raised the alarm by shouting “fire”.

A man, who was also in the property, was able to extinguish the flames blocking their only escape route by using a wet towel before emergency services arrived at the scene.

Craig McQuillian setting the fire. Pic: Crown Office
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Craig McQuillian arriving at the flat. Pic: Crown Office

Craig McQuillian setting the fire. Pic: Crown Office
Image:
Pic: Crown Office

Although no one was injured, the sentencing judge made reference to the Grenfell Tower tragedy of June 2017, in which 72 people died after a blaze tore through the 24-storey block of flats in London.

Lord Mulholland told McQuillian: “You have pleaded guilty to two charges of attempted murder.

“Had it not been for the quick thinking and the bravery of one of the occupants in putting it out, you could have been facing charges of murder.

“You only need to look at Grenfell Tower to know the consequences of actions such as your own.

“However, you got off your mark leaving the occupants to their fate.”

Craig McQuillian setting the fire. Pic: Crown Office
Image:
Pic: Crown Office

Craig McQuillian setting the fire. Pic: Crown Office
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Pic: Crown Office

The incident occurred at around 11.30pm on 12 November 2023.

The High Court in Edinburgh heard that McQuillian set the fire in a targeted attack against the older victim in response to the man’s alleged harassment towards a family member.

McQuillian, who worked as a courier delivering organs for the NHS, was captured on CCTV entering the block of flats with a metal crowbar and a plastic carrier bag which held a container filled with petrol.

After setting fire to the accelerant poured outside the flat door, McQuillian was then seen fleeing the scene.

Craig McQuillian. Pic: Police Scotland
Image:
Craig McQuillian. Pic: Police Scotland

A neighbour, whose doorbell camera recorded the attack, called 999 when they were alerted to the incident via a notification through an app on their phone.

Read more from Sky News:
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The Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service (COPFS) said a Scottish Fire and Rescue Service (SFRS) commander reported that the blaze could have spread throughout the building, creating a risk of additional casualties and damage to the surrounding properties.

The court heard that McQuillian, who lived in Stirling before his arrest, began crying when he learned that a child had been present in the property.

McQuillian pleaded guilty on Tuesday to wilful fire-raising, danger to life and attempted murder. He was sentenced to six years behind bars on Wednesday.

Moira Orr, lead of homicide and major crime COPFS, said: “This was an extremely reckless act that could have had devastating consequences had it not been for the brave and swift actions of his victims.

“Craig McQuillian carefully planned this targeted attack, which took place when most residents would have been asleep in bed.

“It was only by good fortune that the young child smelled burning and was able to raise the alarm in time.

“McQuillian will now have to face the consequences of his callous actions and I hope this conviction gives his victims some comfort.”

Northern Lights: Stunning pictures of phenomenon captured across UK | UK News

Parts of the UK were treated to a spectacular display of the Northern Lights last night.

Also known as the Aurora Borealis, it’s one of the most dazzling displays in the night sky.

Lancaster University’s AuroraWatch, run by the Space and Planetary Physics group, issued a “red alert” – meaning seeing the phenomenon was very “likely”.

A stunning show of the Northern lights over the refuge hut on the Holy Island causeway in Northumberland . Picture date: Wednesday September 13, 2023.
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The Northern Lights over the refuge hut on the Holy Island causeway in Northumberland

The spectacle is most usually associated with Scandinavian countries in Europe but is sometimes visible in the UK.

It is rarely seen south of Scotland – but last night, stargazers reported sightings in Northumberland, the Lake District, Greater Manchester and as far south as Cornwall.

Vivid green, purple, pink and yellow streaks were witnessed through the night sky, with people posting images on X, formerly known as Twitter, describing the show as a “fantastic display”.

What causes the phenomenon?

According to the Royal Observatory Greenwich, the colourful lights we see in the night sky are caused by activity on the sun’s surface.

Solar storms on a star’s surface give out huge clouds of particles charged with electricity, which can enter the Earth’s atmosphere very quickly.

“These particles then slam into atoms and molecules in the Earth’s atmosphere and essentially heat them up,” Royal Observatory astronomer Tom Kerss said.

“We call this physical process ‘excitation, but it’s very much like heating a gas and making it glow.”

And so, what we are seeing are atoms and molecules in our atmosphere colliding with particles from the sun.

How do I see the Aurora Borealis from the UK?

The further north you are, the more likely you are to see the display – if you’re on X, check out @aurorawatchuk, where the space physicists at Lancaster University will tweet when the Northern Lights may be visible from the UK.

The conditions still need to be right: dark and clear nights with as little light pollution as possible.

Invictus Games: ‘It’s like a true rebirth,’ says Ukrainian army medic who was captured and tortured | World News

A Ukrainian army medic who was captured and tortured by the Russians has said her involvement with the Invictus Games saved her life.

Yuliia “Taira” Paievska took part in last year’s games and is currently competing in Dusseldorf.

Prince Harry paid a personal tribute to her bravery at the game’s opening ceremony.

“I think I speak for everyone when I say I think you embody the true spirit of Ukraine and of Invictus,” he said.

We caught up with Taira who told us, she can’t believe she’s made it to the games.

“When you prepare yourself for death and then you get out of those horrible cells and then you see all this, it’s like a true rebirth,” she said.

Taira featured in Prince Harry’s recent Netflix series, Heart Of Invictus.

She was imprisoned for 12 weeks earlier this year, and says her links to the games secured her release.

“I am thankful for this competition because it made me famous and because a lot of people got to know me, that’s why I was freed so quickly.”

Ukrainian medic Yuliia Paievska, known to Ukrainians by the nickname Taira, gets emotional during an appearance before U.S. lawmakers on the Helsinki Commission, Thursday, Sept. 15, 2022 on Capitol Hill in Washington. (AP Photo/Mariam Zuhaib)
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Ukrainian medic Yuliia ‘Taira’ Paievska

Taira had a private meeting with the Duke of Sussex. She still needs more surgery, but won’t stop fighting for her country.

“The conditions in captivity are horrible, the tortures in basic basements which they use for captivity,” she said. “I want the world to demand the release of all prisoners.”

When Prince Harry founded the games it was all about Afghanistan. A different conflict has brought new competitors.

Semen Lahun, 26, who is part of team Ukraine at Invictus Games. Bundock VT grab
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Semen Lahun, who is planning to return to the frontline after the games

Semen Lahun, 26, who is part of team Ukraine at Invictus Games. Bundock VT grab

We met Semen Lahun, 26, who’s part of team Ukraine.

He was a builder in Lviv but signed up to fight when Russia invaded.

Last August, Semen was badly injured when a landmine exploded. He nearly lost his foot, but surgeons saved it.

Training for the games has helped his recovery.

“It is an escape, a recreation, both physical and mental. I have lost some of my brothers-in-arms and I felt so helpless, but the games have put me back on track,” he said.

Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex, talks to participants and officials at the 6th Invictus Games. Pic: AP
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Prince Harry at the 6th Invictus Games in Dusseldorf. Pic: AP

Read more:
Prince Harry opens Invictus Games in Germany
Daughter of medic captured by Russia meets Harry and Meghan

Semen will soon return to the frontline. He was moved when Prince Harry spoke about Ukraine, and says his Invictus involvement makes a difference.

“He’s a special person for me. I admire him because he made this happen, and he organised it and developed it, and it helps so much. Not just me, but my family too.”

Justin McLaughlin murder: Daniel Haig captured on CCTV holding knife moments before he stabbed 14-year-old boy at train station | UK News

A teenager has been pictured brandishing a knife which he used to stab a 14-year-old schoolboy to death just moments later.

Daniel Haig, 18, was also seen in other CCTV images arriving at Glasgow’s High Street station before the fatal attack and then fleeing the scene.

Haig has now been jailed for a minimum of 16 years after stabbing Justin McLaughlin in the heart and leaving him to die on a railway platform.

Just before, Haig had run at a group of youths, including Justin, and a clash broke out on a platform. After the scuffle ended, Haig jumped on to the track to retrieve the bladed weapon which he had dropped.

The killer inflicted the single fatal blow after Justin tripped and fell during a chase at the station in October 2021.

Justin, who had just celebrated his birthday two days earlier, pleaded for his mother as friends tried to come to his aid following the stabbing. He was taken to hospital but never recovered.

Haig, who was 16 at the time of the attack, admitted knifing Justin but had denied murder. Back in June he was found guilty following a trial at the High Court in Glasgow.

He was handed a life sentence with a minimum of 16 years behind bars at the High Court in Edinburgh on Wednesday.

The judge said the murder had a “devastating effect” on the victim’s family.

Daniel Haig  stabbed Justin McLaughlin in the heart  in 2021
Pic:Police Scotland
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Haig (L) stabbed Justin McLaughlin in the heart in 2021. Pic: Police Scotland

Lord Clark said: “They are left with the dreadful loss you have caused for the rest of their lives.”

The judge described it as a “brutal murder”.

He added: “Justin McLaughin was only 14, a child.

“And he was just getting back on his feet when you stabbed him. He was in a defenceless position.”

The trial heard Haig got into a scuffle with Justin and a group of his friends at the railway station on 16 October 2021.

Haig pulled a knife out of his rucksack and was seen on CCTV chasing the youths. He was also recorded jumping on to the track to retrieve the weapon after dropping it.

Lord Clark said: “They were all running some distance away from you, but Justin McLaughlin tripped and fell.

“You ran right up to him and as he was standing back up you stabbed him. The knife went right through his heart.”

The judge added it was “deeply disturbing” to see gang activity still happening in Scotland.

Daniel Haig arriving at Glasgow's High Street station. Pic: Crown Office
Image:
Haig arrives at Glasgow’s High Street station. Pic: Crown Office

Lord Clark said: “It has been going on for many decades. A boy with a knife attacking and killing another boy because he is from a different local scheme, and there is gang rivalry, is completely senseless.”

Read more:
Man jailed for ‘vicious, feral and wholly murderous’ near fatal knife attack
Deaths of teenagers who attended DJ event investigated as ‘drug related

Haig claimed he was carrying the blade for “protection” as he had been attacked a day earlier. He also said he had not intended to kill the Coatbridge teen and felt “really bad about it”.

Daniel Haig fleeing from Glasgow's High Street station after stabbing Justin McLaughlin. Pic: Crown Office
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Haig was later seen on CCTV fleeing the scene. Pic: Crown Office

Killer ‘bitterly regrets his actions’

Defence counsel John Scullion KC said: “He now bitterly regrets his actions and the tragic consequences for the deceased and his family.”

Mr Scullion said Haig had “adverse childhood experiences during formative years” and by the time he was 16 he was regularly using drugs and alcohol.

The defence counsel said the case represented “a tragic waste of human life”.

Justin’s family said their lives would “never be the same”.

Victim was ‘blue-eyed boy”

Paying tribute to their “blue-eyed boy”, they said: “He was the character of the family. His younger brothers miss him so much.

“He was their best friend as well as a brother. It is a family devastated by knife crime.”

Following the verdict, it emerged that Haig had attacked a man with a garden fork and was later caught with a blade before Justin’s murder.

Moira Orr, head of homicide and major crime for the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service (COPFS), said: “This case is tragic evidence of the destruction wreaked when young people carry bladed weapons.

“We must hope this sends a message to children and teenagers who may be tempted to carry knives. They risk causing calamitous and irreparable harm to others and to themselves.”