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British father of boy killed in Paphos hotel fall demands release from custody

In-Cyprus · 2026-07-16

AI SUMMARY

• What happened: The father of a three-year-old British boy who died after falling from a hotel window in Paphos is demanding his release from custody, arguing that his continued detention is harming his psychological state. • Why it matters: The father was remanded for eight days following the incident, and his lawyer claims that the investigation has progressed to a point where his detention is no longer necessary, raising concerns about the legal and humanitarian implications of his custody. • What to watch next: The Paphos District Court is expected to respond to the father's lawyer's request for release, which includes proposed conditions to mitigate any flight-risk concerns.

Local accidentPaphosTop Newsuk British father of boy killed in Paphos hotel fall demands release from custody Relevant News British father of boy killed in Paphos hotel fall demands release from custody 16 July 2026 New Delhi tells shipowners not to deploy Indian seafarers on Hormuz routes 16 July 2026 More than 500 feared dead after boats carrying refugees sink off Myanmar, UN says 16 July 2026 Theodora Nicolaou 16 July 2026 FacebookXWhatsAppEmailPrintViber The father of the three-year-old British boy who died after falling from a fourth-floor window at a hotel in Chlorakas has asked police to release him immediately, according to a letter his lawyer sent to Police Headquarters and Assistant Chief of Police (Investigations) Marios Agiotis. The boy fell on July 12, shortly after his family arrived in Cyprus for a holiday, and the father, 37, was remanded for eight days by Paphos District Court the following day, as previously reported. His lawyer’s letter now argues that continued detention is worsening his client’s already severe psychological state. The lawyer said the father wants to be released so that he and his wife can tell their five-year-old daughter that her brother has died. The letter states the couple have so far only told the girl that her brother is in hospital. The lawyer’s letter states that the father appeared before Paphos District Court on July 13 in a state of what the lawyer described as unspeakable psychological shock and without legal representation, and did not object to the eight-day detention order sought by police because of his psychological condition. The letter adds that the father cooperated fully with investigators that day, voluntarily giving a statement setting out his account of events, and that relatives also gave statements to police the same day. The letter argues that continued detention no longer serves any investigative purpose, stating that the part of the investigation the father could have influenced has already been completed. Citing the Supreme Court’s ruling in Savva v Police, Criminal Appeal 58/2026, dated March 6, 2026, the letter notes there is no fixed rule for how long a suspect should be held, tying the length of detention to the volume and nature of the investigative work still required. The ruling also states, according to the letter, that a suspect must be released if the police investigation is completed before a detention order expires. On that basis, the lawyer’s letter requests the father’s immediate release. It notes that the father is a British national and, to address any flight-risk concerns, proposes that he be released under conditions he has voluntarily accepted: surrendering all his travel documents to police, reporting to sign in at Paphos Central Police Station on a specified day and time, and formally declaring his exact address in Cyprus to police in writing. “He must be released today” The father’s lawyer, Petros Stavrou, told philenews the letter was sent on Tuesday, July 14, 2026, and that he has not yet received a response. He said he proposed the surrender of travel documents as an alternative measure because police had raised concerns over the father’s status as a foreign national. “He must be released immediately, if possible even today,” Stavrou said, adding that he saw no legal reason to keep the father in custody and questioning what purpose it would serve for the investigation. Stavrou said the eight-day detention order against his client expires on Monday, July 20, 2026, but noted that police are obliged to release a suspect if the investigation is completed before that date, meaning the request for release rests on legal grounds as well as humanitarian ones. Read more: Psychological state alone does not bar detention, lawyer says on Paphos toddler death case Subscribe to our Newsletter Latest News New Delhi tells shipowners not to deploy Indian seafarers on Hormuz routes More than 500 feared dead after boats carrying refugees sink off Myanmar, UN says Father to appear in court over Xylophagou deaths of two boys Over half of eurozone shoppers buy from Chinese platforms like Temu Neighbour helps residents escape Protaras apartment fire Ex-officer alleges Cyprus Police wiretapped citizens without warrant Suspended Paphos Mayor to stand trial for rape Follow en.philenews on Google News and be the first to know all the news about Cyprus and the world.

Source: In-Cyprus
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