Football fans across England on Saturday paid a touching tribute to Arthur Labinjo-Hughes, a six-year-old schoolboy who was murdered by his parents.
A picture of the Birmingham City fan was
projected onto a big screen during fixtures around the country as he was honoured in a
minute-long tribute, with supporters clapping for the youngster.
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Coventry City, who played West Bromwich
Albion also paid a tribute, as did football fans at various Premier League games, including Wolverhampton vs
Liverpool game.
Fans at Birmingham City, who Arthur
supported, tweeted on Saturday that players and fans staged a “touching
tribute” by also clapping during their game away at Millwall. There are plans
for another tribute for the team’s game at Cardiff.
Parents jailed
His mother Emma Tustin was jailed for 29 years on
Friday for murder and child cruelty and Arthur’s father, Thomas Hughes, was
given 21 years of a prison sentence for his manslaughter.
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But the Attorney General is expected to be
asked to review the “lenient” jail sentences given to the couple. Solihull MP
Julian Knight called for longer jail terms for the “horrible monsters”.
Arthur died of a head injury after being
hit by Tustin on June 16.
During the sentencing, the judge said
Arthur had been, at the time Tustin was introduced into his life, a “healthy,
happy young boy”.
But less than three months after moving in
with Tustin at the start of the first national lockdown, the little boy was
left “broken” from exposure to a campaign of “acute or prolonged abuse,” he
said.
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Tustin was also convicted of two counts of
child cruelty, including salt-poisoning and withholding food and drink from
Arthur.
She had admitted two other cruelty counts,
wilfully assaulting Arthur on three occasions and isolating him, including by
forcing him to stand in the hallway for up to 14 hours a day as part of a
draconian punishment regime.