Speaking during lunch at Mrs B's Tea Shop on the corner of the High Street and Church Street, she said: "I don't trust Reform. I don't trust Nigel Farage. I think they're quite dangerous at the moment.
That was, as one child survivor put it, the "beginning of my nightmare".Accounts from inside the dance class confirm that Rudakubana moved calmly and purposefully.
He had been planning this moment for some time. He did not hesitate, grabbing and stabbing the girl nearest to the door as soon as he walked in.As Rudakubana attacked, he did not say a word.For those inside the room, it took a moment to comprehend what was happening.
"I thought the man who stabbed me was a cleaner," one of the child victims recounted.It must be a practical joke, she thought, but later said: "I realised it wasn't a prank when I saw blood coming out of me".
Her memories of what happened next are "fuzzy", but the child said she remembers thinking: "I don't want to die, I have got to get out of here".
Another victim said the image of Rudakubana in her memory is that of a monster stalking around the studio.It was hoped the money would pay for a renovation of two blocks, creating 48 spaces and opening in September, the
The council said there was a need for more secondary school capacity in Kettering, as it granted £561,000 to Latimer Arts College.An extra 49 places across years 7, 8 and 9 will be opened up by the money, with work to increase the size of dining areas also planned.
Further cash was handed to Alfred Lord Tennyson School in Rushden, which formed in 2023 when Tennyson Road Infants and Alfred Street JuniorsThe new school was given £925,000 to help ensure its combined site was ready from September 2025.