1. Mother of Mia Ayliffe-Chung tried to get daughter’s Facebook page shut down but Facebook refused as there was no proof of death.
The mother of the 21-year-old British backpacker who died last week in a hostel in Queensland after being stabbed to death has spoken of her futile attempt to protect her daughter’s image after she died.
Mia’s mother, Rosie Ayliffe has told the ABC she tried to shut down Mia’s Facebook page as she didn’t want it to be pillaged for photos or “stupid comments” she’d made.
She says she spoke to Facebook who told her she needed “proof of death”.
“My daughter had died two hours earlier and I needed proof of death,” Ms Ayliffe said.
“As a consequence, her Facebook profile was wide open and exactly what I thought would happen did happen.”
She wrote for The Independent: “Before she left the UK this wouldn’t have been a problem as she was careful about what she put on Facebook, but the youth culture in a city is different to that in a small-town environment like ours, and Mia’s Facebook was getting a lot racier than I’d have liked.”
“I didn’t try to control this as the last thing I wanted was for her to feel I was being judgmental or to ‘unfriend’ me so that we would lose contact. She’s a beautiful girl, and how she chooses to dress is (was) her business.”
Police have charged 29-year-old French man Smail Ayad with her murder.
She told the ABC that she felt pity towards her daughter killer.
“If he is capable of contrition and of realising what he has done, I feel pity for him, because he now has to live knowing that he has killed two beautiful, strong, exceptional people – and even if they weren’t he’s killed two people – he has to live with that.”
2. Canberra man whose DNA was allegedly found in 2-year-old’s nappy denies charges.
A 37-year-old man from Canberra whose semen was allegedly found inside the nappy of a two-year-old girl has told a court he never sexually assaulted the toddler.