World War Two memorial vandalised for third time
A World War Two war memorial in Worcester may never return to its home, after being vandalised for a third time.
The Meco Memorial Sculpture in St John's remembers the victims of the only fatal German attack on the city. The Meco works were targeted in a bombing raid in 1940, killing seven workers.
The leaf-shaped sculpture has been removed for repair after being pulled down, but councillor Richard Udall is no longer confident that it would be safe to return to its original place.
"It makes me feel extremely angry and very frustrated. And I know from speaking to some of the relatives of the of the victims, they feel very hurt," he said.
Mr Udall added: "It is shocking that a war memorial, which commemorated those who gave their lives fighting fascism in the second world war on the home front, has been vandalized in such a disrespectful way."
The sculpture was unveiled in 2023 but was removed from Sanctuary Park in the run-up to the 80th anniversary of VE Day, leaving an empty space surrounded by benches.
"There was no information about the bombing whatsoever but Worcester people knew about it, they knew people who had died or had been injured in the bombing.
"So it was very significant in Worcester, and especially in St John's," he said.
Mr Udall said he hoped those responsible "didn't know".
"The only other and much less charitable explanation is they do know and don't care but I would hope that's not the case."
A Worcester City Council spokesperson said: "The sculpture has been temporarily moved while the damage is assessed. We are assessing future options for the placement of the sculpture."
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Indianapolis Star
2 days ago
- Indianapolis Star
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More than three months after the shooting, authorities announced that the FBI's Behavioral Analysis Unit had determined the shooting was "an act of suicidal murder" in which Hole decided to kill himself "in a way he believed would demonstrate his masculinity and capability while fulfilling a final desire to experience killing people." "Only the shooter knows all the reasons why he committed this horrific act of violence," then-FBI Indianapolis Special Agent in Charge Paul Keenan said, adding that Hole "did not appear to have been motivated by bias or desire to advance any ideology." Keenan said authorities reviewed Hole's online activity, but that World War II and Nazi-type propaganda was only a small percentage of his overall viewing. "I believe we reviewed about 175,000 files this computer and it was somewhere in the neighborhood of less than 200 files mainly of German military, German Nazi things," Keenan said. The records released so far are limited in scope. 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2 days ago
Police say a German man engaged in cybergrooming and pressured a US teen to kill himself
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Boston Globe
2 days ago
- Boston Globe
Karen Read case doomed by sloppy investigation and overcharge, experts say
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