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ISIS sex slave who was kidnapped at 11 reveals she was fed cooked babies before being kept prisoner by Hamas in Gaza

STARVATION started to set in four days after 11-year-old Fawzia Amin Saydo was brutally kidnapped by ISIS fighters.

Handed plates of meat, she and dozens of other desperate women and children realised something was wrong as soon as they started eating.

a young girl wearing a red t-shirt is standing in front of a wall .
Supplied
Fawzia Amin Saydo pictured as a child before she was snatched by IS fighters[/caption]
a young woman wearing a choker and a blue shirt is looking at the camera .
The mum, now 21, has been rescued from Gaza
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Footage showed her being reunited with family[/caption]
Alamy
IS fighters pictured in Syria[/caption]

Having been barbarically left without food for days, they had little choice but to accept it.

As a feeling of sickness consumed them, murderous ISIS thugs revealed the truth: they had been eating the meat of slaughtered babies.

But that was just the beginning of the unimaginable suffering and inhumane conditions Fawzia was forced to endure for a decade.

Ten years of hell saw her being kidnapped from her home in Iraq, being bought and sold as a slave in Syria, and then ending up held captive in the Gaza Strip.

And she was finally rescued earlier this month after issuing a desperate cry for help online – with activists successfully lobbying for her release in a secret operation overseen by the Israelis.

After being held as a slave in one of the world’s deadliest war zones – brave Fawzia revealed her harrowing ordeal to The Sun in an interview with documentarian Alan Duncan.

She spoke of being held prisoner by Hamas – just like she was by ISIS – and said there was “no difference” between the two terror groups.

And she described the horrific conditions in Gaza, telling how she saw hospitals being used as Hamas bases by armed fighters and how she was beaten, abused and held captive.

Her lawyer Zemfira Dlovani told The Sun how Fawzia, now 21, has been left so traumatised, she can only recall around 15 per cent of her plight from the past 10 years.

She put the captive Fawzia in touch with ex-Brit squaddie-turned-filmmaker Duncan – who helped lobby for the rescue mission.

Fawzia contacted him over WhatsApp saying: “I am not safe. I am very afraid. What should I do?”

Duncan, who has spent years investigating ISIS’s crimes – speaking to both perpetrators and victims, said: “There were times she had given up hope she would ever be free.”

But now Fawzia can tell her story – giving a candid account of her ordeal, and compelling testimony about the crimes of both Hamas and ISIS – while still living in fear of terrorists.

Fawzia was one of thousands of the Yazidi people who were subjected to genocide by ISIS, with an estimated 5,000 murdered and more than 10,000 kidnapped.

She was just 11 years old when barbaric Islamic State fighters stormed her hometown of Sinjar, northern Iraq, in August 2014.

Men were slaughtered while thousands of women and children were abducted by bloodthirsty extremists.

Fawzia’s two brothers, aged seven and ten, were banished to a camp to be indoctrinated and trained as child soldiers.

Though they managed to escape, Fawzia endured years of violence and rape at the hands of vicious ISIS fighters.

She and dozens of other helpless women and girls were dragged to Tal Afar before being sent to Syria.

Fawzia revealed how they were starved for four days before heartless terrorists finally gave them something to eat when they made it to the city in northwest Iraq.

I always did what I was told because I was so young and very scared.

Fawzia

Speaking just after her release, she told The Sun: “They cooked rice and also meat and brought it to us.

“Because we were so hungry, we just ate what was on the table.

“While we were eating we knew something was wrong because the taste was weird but we just ate because we were hungry.

“After, we all had stomach ache and felt sick.”

Ruthless IS brutes then revealed their heinous act.

“When we were done, they told us that the meat was from the babies,” Fawzia said.

“There was a woman who had a heart attack at that moment and died.

“They showed us pictures of the beheaded kids and babies and said ‘these are the kids you ate’.

“It is very hard but it was not our fault, they forced us but of course it is very hard for us that this happened. Nothing was in our hands.”

Inconsolable mothers wept and screamed, realising why in Tal Afar they had been so callously separated from their babies.

One mother recognised her baby by their hand in photos they were shown, Fawzia recalled.

Enslaved by brutal IS thugs, Fawzia was hauled to the Syrian city of Raqqa in early 2015.

a group of people walking down a dirt road in front of tents that say unicef
AFP or licensors
Families walk through Al-Hawl refugee camp in Syria[/caption]
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She rushed to embrace them after years apart[/caption]
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Fawzia pictured in the care of the Iraqi authorities earlier this month after being rescued[/caption]
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Fawzia took footage of razed Gaza while riding in the back of a truck
She also recorded a video of her on a beach in Gaza

She was imprisoned for nine months in an underground prison with around 200 others in vile conditions.

“We were held in the dark the whole time. We never saw the sunlight,” she said.

“We were in a prison, we didn’t do anything, we couldn’t go outside.

“We had to drink dirty water, some children died. It was a very tough time.

“These men came in and if they liked a girl they took them with them.”

Fawzia was bought and sold five times by remorseless IS fighters in the several years she was held in Syria.

The fifth man who bought her was a Palestinian ISIS militant more than ten years her senior.

The thug, 24, used drugs to rape a then very young Fawzia.

She said: “At the beginning, I would hide in the bathroom until he was asleep because I didn’t know what he wanted from me. I was scared. I didn’t want him to do anything.

“When he noticed I was hiding, one day he gave me drugs and I fell asleep and he raped me.”

He repeatedly physically and sexually abused Fawzia, and by the tender age of 15, she had given birth to a son and a daughter.

Fawzia became a devoted mum to her two children – despite still being a child herself.

In 2018, ISIS was finally driven out of its final territory Syria and she lost contact with her captor.

The young mum was then sent to Al-Hawl camp, which by early December 2018 held 10,000 people – later swelling to more than 60,000.

Notoriously grim Al-Hawl, which sits in the desert of northeast Syria, was also home to merciless ISIS terrorists and their families – including Westerners who went to join the caliphate.

When I was in Israel and I knew there was no Hamas anymore and I was free, I was very happy. I could breathe again.

Fawzia

Fawzia said: “ISIS women were very bad to me, they forced me to work for them.

“I always did what I was told because I was so young and very scared. They also tried to force me to be Muslim.”

Eight months after she was taken to the camp, Fawzia said she received word her Palestinian captor was in prison in Idlib, Syria.

Fearing for her children’s future as they would likely be rejected from her community, Fawzia went to Gaza to live with his family.

She was taken via Turkey and Egypt with a fake passport before being driven into Gaza in 2020.

Fawzia said: “The underground tunnel from Idlib was so tight, there was no air. Some people died. We then walked 31 hours to the next place in Turkey.”

But once in Gaza, Fawzia was subjected to vile treatment from her dead husband’s family.

She was regularly beaten and – under Hamas’ reign – was virtually imprisoned in their home.

Fawzia dismissed reports she had remarried her dead husband’s brother while in Gaza and told how she was kept under Hamas’ boot.

She said: “I was never free to do what I wanted. If I was, I would have gone out of Gaza earlier.

“I could not do that, I always had to stay under their control.

“There was one time Hamas held a gun to my head and to my side when I went outside with her friend.

“They said it was not allowed.”

How Fawzia Amin Saydo was rescued

By Katie Davis, Chief Foreign Reporter

IT was a complex operation several months in the making.

Having suffered at the hands of terrorists for a decade, Fawzia Amin Saydo was desperate to get home to the family she had been cruelly snatched from as a child.

After nine years of abuse, Fawzia managed to send out a TikTok video begging for help after Israel invaded Gaza following the October 7 atrocity.

In the video, in which she wore a hijab and covered part of her face with a crying emoji, she said: “I hope you can rescue me from this place.

“If anyone comes and enters Palestine, no matter the location, I will go to them.”

Her lawyer, Zemfira Dlovani, told The Sun how after she told of Fawzia’s ordeal by a Yazidi activist Ronai Chaker in June she instantly contacted her directly.

Dlovani said: “She [Fawzia] said do whatever you need to do to get me out of here because I am very scared and I’m in a very bad situation here.”

The attorney contacted squaddie turned documentarian Alan Duncan, who helped free slave Naveen Rasho from Al-Hawl compound.

Duncan made contact with Fawzia – and began to help rallying support for a rescue mission.

Dlovani added: “We all spoke a lot to Fawzia to try and give her hope and told her to stay calm. She was scared and wanted to get out of Gaza as soon as possible.

“It took three months, it was a very intense time. She was very, very scared.”

The secret mission involved Israel, the US, and Iraq – including undercover agents.

Dlovani, Duncan, Chaker, activist Hussein Baadre, Israel-based journalist Jonathan Spyer and businessman Steve Maman all helped lobby for the rescue.

But The Sun understands that the final decision to launch the mission came from the Israeli Defence Force – who planned the operation alongside Cogat, the Israeli agency that works in Gaza and the West Bank.

On October 1, after weeks of meticulous planning – Fawzia received a phone call.

It was time to leave.

A vehicle was sent to collect Fawzia from close to the Kerem Shalom crossing.

Drones were used to keep a watchful eye on the vehicle before it arrived at the crossing and she was transferred into a UN ambulance to be taken into Israel.

Anxious Fawzia was then taken to Allenby Bridge crossing by US embassy officials, which connects with Jordan.

Fawzia was taken into the care of the Iraqi consulate before being flown to Baghdad and then Erbil the following day.

The final stint of the journey back to Sinjar was taken by car, when she was tearfully reunited with her family.

Colonel Richard Kemp, who commanded British troops in Afghanistan, acted as a mediator during Fawzia’s rescue.

He told The Sun: “Alan provided intelligence to the IDF which allowed them to mount an operation to bring her out of Gaza.

“It would have been secretly, with some sort of communication between Fawzia and the IDF. There are big risks involved there for Fawzia in particular.

“Gaza is obviously a warzone, so there is always a hazard. The IDF is very strong there.

“The critical thing I rescuing her was to ensure secrecy in the process so Hamas didn’t get wind of what was going on and couldn’t have taken action to prevent it.

“I’m sure they would have [tried to stop the rescue] if they knew, I think they would have done all they could to prevent her getting away.

“They probably would have killed her if they suspected anything, if they suspected any communication between her and the IDF.”

Fawzia told how she was treated as a “sabaya” – or slave – by Hamas.

After Hamas’ atrocious massacre in Israel on October 7 and abduction of hundreds of hostages sparked Israel to invade Gaza, Fawzia was sent to work as a slave in a hospital.

She said: “All hospitals were being used as Hamas bases.

“They all had weapons, everyone had weapons everywhere.”

Fawzia’s rescue from Gaza was months in the making in a complex operation orchestrated by several individuals as well as authorities in Israel, the US, and Iraq – risking her life by communicating with them while locked in a terrorist state.

On October 1, she was finally freed from terrorists’ chains and eventually reunited with her family in Iraq.

But after her rescue was confirmed, Hamas concocted a statement claiming Fawzia had been willingly living in Gaza – and only wanted to leave because of the war.

Fawzia said: “What Hamas says is wrong, it is an absolute lie. I was never free, I was forced to stay in the house.

“When I was in Israel and I knew there was no Hamas anymore and I was free, I was very happy. I could breathe again.

“They were very bad, they forced us, they killed people, they forced me to be there. Why would I be there until now if I wasn’t forced to.

“These people who say it’s not true, it’s lies, that these things never happened to me, they should have been there instead of me, in my place, then they could talk about that.

“There is no difference between Hamas and ISIS.

“I didn’t believe I would get rescued until I did.”

But a heartbroken Fawzia declines to speak of her children, now five and six, who she has not seen for several months.

The genocide of the Yazidis

By Henry Holloway, Deputy Foreign Editor

FEW people suffered more under the vicious boot of ISIS than the Yazidis.

Thousands of women and girls from the Kurdish minority group were forced into sexual slavery by the vicious terror group.

And the terrorists simply killed all the group’s men they could get their blood-stained hands on.

It is estimated at least 5,000 Yazidis were killed, at least 10,000 kidnapped, and some 500,000 were forced to leave their homes.

The United Nations recognises the barbarity as nothing short of genocide.

ISIS first attacked the Yazidis during their bloody rise to power in 2014, butchering their way through their communities in northern Iraq.

Massacres were widespread – with victims being gunned down, beheaded or even buried alive.

Disturbing accounts detail atrocities such as a mother being forced to eat pieces of her own baby, or women being burned alive for refusing to have sex with ISIS fighters.

Mass graves are still being discovered from this period – with 30 more bodies discovered this month in Hamadan.

But those who weren’t killed were forced into slavery by ISIS.

Yazidi women and children were bought, sold and subjected to forced conversation to ISIS’s warped version of Islam.

They were turned into slaves – sold, raped and abused,

Yazidi women who were pregnant were given forced abortions – and then raped by ISIS fighters so they could give birth to “Muslim babies”.

ISIS considered Yazidis “devil worshippers” because of their religious beliefs.

The survivors are still reeling from the horrors inflicted upon them by ISIS – and they want justice.

Germany has managed to convict ISIS fighters of genocide for their crimes against the Yazidis – and meanwhile, probes are also being carried out by the Netherlands, Germany and Sweden.

Britain however – for whatever reason – appears to not be pursuing ISIS fighters for their complicity in the crimes against the Yazidis.

Fawzia’s rescue from Gaza – and her heartbreaking story – shows there are still Yazidis out there who had been snatched from their homes.

It is estimated some 2,700 Yazidis remain missing across the Middle East.

Many families remain desperate that loved ones they lost may one day return to them – just like Fawzia.

Her lawyer Zemfira Dlovani told The Sun: “When she was in Gaza, she didn’t have her kids with her anymore.

“They were taken, she didn’t have control over that any way long time before she left Gaza. They were not with her.

“We don’t talk a lot about her kids. She doesn’t want to talk about that, she is not comfortable.

“It hurt her of course, every mother knows how it feels to not with with their children.

“That was not her choice. It is not an option for them to be reunited.”

Dlovani said Fawzia is grappling with a mix of emotions after so long in captivity.

She said: ” When she came back [to Iraq], she wasn’t feeling well.

“You have to imagine, she came back to the place where she was taken from ten years ago.

“She came back, her father died three months ago and she was very sad about not being able to see him.

“The first week she was feeling good because she was free and could be with her family, but on the other hand, she was also very sad.

“She also doesn’t feel comfortable there still because this is the place she was taken from. And she is still in fear it could happen again. No one feels safe there. 

“She has hopes to build a new life – but she knows that life will not be in Iraq.”

Dlovani said it will take a long time for Fawzia to recover from her ordeal and process her trauma.

She added: “She was a very strong little girl. She realised very fast, okay if I do what they tell me, I will survive.

“She needs time to rest and time to clarify in her own mind what happened.

“This is only about 15-20 per cent of the whole truth of what she went through.

“She needs lots of time.”

Half of her life a slave of ISIS and Hamas – how can you recover from that? But I know she can.

Alan Duncan

Duncan told The Sun: “I had to say to Fawzia, ‘no promises’ – it was really really hard at times.

“Being ex-forces, I very much understood there were security concerns – we feared it could even be a set up by Hamas as an ambush.

“There was one night in particular – Hamas turned up and threatened her, her and the other girls were taken to hospital, and we feared they would kill her.”

Duncan went on: “But the main thing is she is now free to start living her life. Having dealings with survivors – I understand this is a step-by-step process.

“She is back with her family, back with the Yazidi community – and she can start rebuilding her life.

“Half of her life a slave of ISIS and Hamas – how can you recover from that? But I know she can.”

He added: “The Israelis saw her no different to one of their hostages, they said this was about humanity, and she was just another victim of Hamas – I can’t thank them enough.”

Duncan formerly served with the Queen’s Own Highlanders and Royal Irish Regiment.

He then fought alongside the Kurdish Peshmergas as a sniper to battle against ISIS.

And after the war was over, he decided to use his camera as his new weapon in exposing the depravity of the jihadi cult’s crimes.

His most famous story was the rescue of Naveen Rasho – a Yazidi woman who was held as a slave by ISIS in Syria.

One of Naveen’s captors – an ISIS bride known as Nadine K – has since been jailed in Germany for her role in the genocide.

GAZA, PALESTINE - 2023/07/20: Palestinian fighters from the military wing of the Hamas movement seen on the back of a truck during a military parade near the border with Israel in the central Gaza Strip, during a commemoration of the 2014 war, the 51-day period of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. (Photo by Yousef Masoud/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)
Hamas fighters pictured in Gaza
a man is holding a canon camera and smiling
Duncan is now a filmmaker who documents the crimes of ISIS
He served alongside the Kurdish Peshmergas as a sniper to battle against ISIS

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Are Aliens hiding under ICE on Mars? Nasa scientists reveal why it could be the perfect survival spot

ALIEN life could be lurking under frozen water to survive on Mars, Nasa scientists have suggested.

Living on the Red Planet is near impossible on the surface because of extreme ultraviolet radiation.

an artist 's impression of the planet mars
Getty
Scientists have long wondered whether aliens ever lived on Mars[/caption]
a black and white photo of a rocky landscape
NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Arizona
Experts want to explore areas like this, where there’s dusty water ice[/caption]
a snowy surface with a lot of holes in it
Kimberly Casey, licenced under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
Cryoconite holes like these – found on Earth – could be the answer[/caption]

Earth is protected by harmful radiation thanks to the magnetic field – which Mars does not have.

But scientists have proposed that staying beneath thick ice could shield microbial life from this danger.

Experts haven’t uncovered any evidence that aliens are there – the study outlines such spots as a possibility worth exploring for clues.

They say that the amount of sunlight that can shine through dusty ice could be enough for photosynthesis to occur in shallow pools of meltwater below the surface of that ice without high levels of radiation getting through.

It’s plausible because back home on Earth similar pools of water that form within ice are known to be teeming with life, including algae, fungi, and microscopic cyanobacteria.

Nasa’s Aditya Khuller, who led the study, said: “If we’re trying to find life anywhere in the universe today, Martian ice exposures are probably one of the most accessible places we should be looking.”

Using computer modeling, scientists looked at water ice, most of which formed from snow mixed with dust that fell on the surface during a series of Martian ice ages in the past million years.

If there is dust within ice it can create something known as cryoconite holes, Nasa explains.

These are small holes that form in ice when particles of windblown dust fall there.

They take in sunlight and melt farther into the ice each summer on Earth.

Over time, they lower further down but eventually reach a point where they stop sinking.

However, they still generate enough warmth which creates a pocket of meltwater around them, which life can feed off.

“This is a common phenomenon on Earth,” explained co-author Phil Christensen, from Arizona State University in Tempe.

“Dense snow and ice can melt from the inside out, letting in sunlight that warms it like a greenhouse, rather than melting from the top down.”

The full study was published in the Nature journal Communications Earth & Environment.

Mars facts

Here's what you need to know about the Red Planet...

  • Mars is the fourth planet from the Sun
  • It is named after the Roman god of war
  • The landmass of Mars is very similar to Earth but due to the difference in gravity you could jump three times higher there than you can here
  • Mars is mountainous and hosts the tallest mountain known in the Solar System called Olympus Mons, which is three times higher than Everest
  • Mars is considered to be the second most habitable planet after Earth
  • It takes the planet 687 Earth days to orbit the Sun
  • So far, there has been 39 missions to Mars but only 16 of these have been successful

Read More »

‘Devastated’ Niall Horan says ‘I didn’t know our last goodbye would be it forever’ in emotional tribute to Liam Payne

DEVASTATED Niall Horan has paid tribute to his “amazing friend” and ex-bandmate Liam Payne who died aged 31.

The singer fell from a hotel balcony on Wednesday, days after the One Direction pair reunited at a gig in Argentina.

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Instagram
Niall Horan shared a photo alongside Liam Payne in his tribute today[/caption]
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Liam and Niall reunited at a concert in Buenos Aires[/caption]
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Niall looked devastated as he stepped out for the first time since the tragic news yesterday[/caption]
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Liam with his girlfriend Kate Cassidy at Niall’s concert in Buenos Aires on October 2[/caption]
four men are posing for a picture on a red carpet
Reuters
Liam and Niall with former bandmates Harry Styles and Louis Tomlinson[/caption]

Liam attended one of Niall’s shows on October 2 in Buenos Aires, and was filmed dancing before greeting adoring fans.

The pair later shared backstage selfies – with Niall, also 31, seen grinning broadly.

However, yesterday the Irish musician was snapped looking heartbroken as he stepped out in London to walk his dog, hours after learning of his pal’s death.

He shared a tribute today, featuring a throwback picture with Liam from early in their careers, alongside a black heart emoji.


It comes as…


Niall wrote: “I’m absolutely devastated about the passing of my amazing friend, Liam. It just doesn’t feel real.

“Liam had an energy for life and a passion for work that was infectious. He was the brightest in every room and always made everyone feel happy and secure.

“All the laughs we had over the years, sometimes about the simplest of things, keep coming to mind through the sadness.

“We got to live out our wildest dreams together and I will cherish every moment we had forever. The bond and friendship we had doesn’t happen often in a lifetime.

“I feel so fortunate that I got to see him recently. I sadly didn’t know that after saying goodbye and hugging him that evening, I would be saying goodbye forever. It’s heartbreaking.

“My love and condolences go out to Geoff, Karen, Ruth, Nicola and of course his son Bear.”

Fellow former ID stars Harry Styles, 30, Louis Tomlinson, 32, and Zayn Malik, 31, also expressed their grief in equally heartbreaking posts.

Harry shared a picture of dad-of-one Liam alongside a heartfelt statement that said his “greatest joy was making other people happy”.

Louis, meanwhile, said he was “beyond devastated” after losing his “brother”.

“Liam was somebody I looked up to everyday, such a positive, funny, and kind soul,” he said, adding that the tragic star was the “most vital part” of One Direction.

Zayn shared a photo him and Liam embracing in the back of a car during their early band days.

He said he “can’t help but think selfishly that there was so many more conversations for us to have in our lives”.

The singer, who left the band first in 2016 – months before the remaining members decided to go on an indefinite hiatus – said they often “butted heads” but he had a profound respect for Liam.

DISTURBING BEHAVIOUR

A woman also staying at the CasaSur Hotel in the Palermo area of the Argentine capital where Liam died on Wednesday afternoon, said he displayed “disturbing” behaviour shortly before the tragedy.

She said Liam told her: “I used to be in a boy band – that’s why I’m so f**ked up.”

The 28-year-old said she has been left “shaken” by what happened, having seen Liam just moments before he died.

She told the Mail how “there was something a bit desperate” about Liam’s behaviour.

an aerial view of a hotel with a swimming pool
Reuters
The singer fell to his death into the courtyard of the CasaSur Hotel[/caption]
'Last photo' of Liam Payne, , MUST BE VERIFIED, taken without permission from x , https://x.com/BORAHAEAMl/status/1846697932789043686,
This is understood to be the final photo of Liam
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Police pictured outside the hotel[/caption]
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Niall’s heartbreaking tribute to Liam[/caption]
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Liam and Katie were seen dancing and hugging at the show earlier this month[/caption]

She encountered Liam in the foyer of the hotel on Wednesday afternoon and took photos of him at 4.26pm local time (8.26pm UK time).

She claims he became “upset” by an email on his screen and shouted “f**k this s**t mate” before smashing the laptop on the ground.

A 911 call from hotel staff later that afternoon revealed they needed “urgent assistance” from cops to help with a guest “behaving erratically”.

Liam was found dead in the hotel’s inner courtyard at just after 5pm local time (9pm UK time).

His death was confirmed as soon as ambulance crews arrived.

Cops discovered “what appeared to be narcotics, alcohol, destroyed objects and furniture” in his room.

Photos published by Argentine media showed white powder, burnt aluminium foil and a smashed TV screen inside his suite.

Forensic teams reported that a whiskey bottle, lighter and mobile phone were retrieved from the building’s internal courtyard where Liam’s body was found.

But cops are yet to confirm what the substances found in the room are and are due to run tests on them shortly.

The singer had been open about his battles with addiction in the past.

Officials have said “everything indicates” that he was alone when he died and could have been partly or fully unconscious when he fell.

A full toxicology report is still pending and could take weeks to become public.

One Direction statements in full

We’re completely devastated by the news of Liam’s passing. In time, and when everyone is able to, there will be more to say. 

But for now, we will take some time to grieve and process the loss of our brother, who we loved dearly.

The memories we shared with him will be treasured forever. For now, our thoughts are with his family, his friends, and the fans who loved him alongside us.

We will miss him terribly. We love you Liam. – Louis, Zayn, Niall and Harry.

Louis Tomlinson wrote: “His experience from a young age, his perfect pitch, his stage presence, his gift for writing. The list goes on.

“Thank you for shaping us Liam.

“I want you to know that if Bear ever needs me I will be the Uncle he needs in his life and tell him stories of how amazing his dad was.

“I wish I got a chance to say goodbye and tell you one more time how much I loved you.”

Zayn Malik said: “Liam I have found myself talking out loud to you, hoping you can hear me, I can’t help but think selfishly that there was so many more conversations for us to have in our lives.

“I never got to thank you for supporting me through some of the most difficult times in my life.

“When I was missing home as a 17-year-old kid, you would always be there with a positive outlook and reassuring smile and let me know you were my friend and that I was loved.”

He added: “When it came to the music, Liam, you were the most qualified in every sense.

“I knew nothing in comparison, I was a novice child with no experience and you were already a professional.

“I lost a brother when you left us and can’t explain to you what I’d give to just give you a hug one last time and say goodbye to you properly.

“I will cherish all the memories I have with you in my heart forever”.

And Harry Styles wrote: “I am truly devastated by Liam’s passing.

“His greatest joy was making other people happy, and it was an honour to be alongside him as he did it.

“Liam lived wide open, with his heart on his sleeve, he had an energy for life that was infectious.

“He was warm, supportive, and incredibly loving.

“The years we spent together will forever remain among the most cherished years of my life. I will miss him always, my lovely friend.

“My heart breaks for Karen, Geoff, Nicola and Ruth, his son Bear, and all those around the world who knew and loved him, as I did.”

Niall Horan wrote: “I’m absolutely devastated about the passing of my amazing friend, Liam. It just doesn’t feel real.

“Liam had an energy for life and a passion for work that was infectious. He was the brightest in every room and always made everyone feel happy and secure.

“All the laughs we had over the years, sometimes about the simplest of things, keep coming to mind through the sadness.

“We got to live out our wildest dreams together and I will cherish every moment we had forever. The bond and friendship we had doesn’t happen often in a lifetime.

“I feel so fortunate that I got to see him recently. I sadly didn’t know that after saying goodbye and hugging him that evening, I would be saying goodbye forever. It’s heartbreaking.

“My love and condolences go out to Geoff, Karen, Ruth, Nicola and of course his son Bear.”

a box of dove soap sits on a messy table
White powder and burnt aluminium foil were allegedly found inside Liam Payne’s hotel room
a broken sony tv is sitting on a wooden shelf
A smashed up TV and champagne glasses were also pictured
Clarin
Splash
Liam was just 16 when he shot to fame on the X Factor[/caption]
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The Mega Agency
1D became one of the highest selling boybands in history, with Liam also finding success as a solo artist[/caption]

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‘I’m not the most talented, all I’ve ever done is copy people,’ says greatest snooker player ever Ronnie O’Sullivan

RONNIE O’Sullivan is one of snooker’s all-time greats – but claims it’s because he’s a good mimic.

The seven-time world champion has won it all in a career spanning over three decades.

a man with a name tag that says ' o'neill ' on it
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Ronnie O’Sullivan claims his natural talent hasn’t been enough to win him seven world titles[/caption]
a man is playing snooker on a table that says strachan on it
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The 48-year-old star dropped out of his last two tournaments on medical grounds[/caption]

O’Sullivan turned professional at the age of just 16 and is widely regarded among the best to ever play.

But the 48-year-old doesn’t put his immense success down to natural talent – insisting he’s simply a great “copier.”

O’Sullivan told The Daily Express: “As a kid, I wanted to be [Steve Davis, or Stephen Hendry].

“They were winners and that’s what I wanted to be. I have always copied people.

“That’s all I have ever done. I’ve never really worked out anything for myself.

“I’ve learned from other people. I’m not this person who is gifted or has invented anything.

“I’ve just copied Davis, copied Hendry, copied Jimmy White, copied John Higgins, copied Judd Trump. I’ll look at what he does, or he does.”

Known as The Rocket for his fast potting, O’Sullivan’s life away from snooker has been as turbulent as some of his whirlwind breaks.

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He has previously indicated his disdain for the sport, but also admits snooker can provide an “escape” from the world.

O’Sullivan continued: “Even today, if I’ve got a problem, I just go and play snooker and forget about it.

“I’m lucky to have a relationship with something that’s enabled me to do that.”

But he added: “I mean, I always say it’s overrated, winning all those world titles and tournaments.

“It was a dream when I was a kid but now it’s not all it’s cracked up to be.

'I'd rather not have the snooker, just a normal family' - Inside Ronnie O'Sullivan's troubled childhood

RONNIE O'SULLIVAN has enjoyed an incredible career as snooker's biggest star.

But the Rocket’s turbulent past has led to struggles with mental health, addiction and yo-yo weight battles.

O’Sullivan’s parents ran a chain of sex shops in Essex and his father was jailed for 20 years for murder when he was just 16.

In the Amazon documentary The Edge of Everything, the snooker icon admitted his dad going to prison had a profound effect.

He said: “I didn’t want to blame everything on that situation with my dad, but I was thinking, ‘I’d rather not have the snooker. just a normal family’. Because… It was a dream, but looking back, it was a nightmare.”

Just a year later, Ronnie became the youngest ever UK Champion, seven days before his 18th birthday. Then at 19, in 1994, he became the youngest Masters champion.

But he has already begun to binge on drink and drugs and, when his mum was sent to prison for tax evasion, in 1996, he struggled to cope with looking after his eight–year-old sister alone.

Read more: Ronnie O’Sullivan’s yo-yo health battles – from ballooning to 16st on Smirnoff to ‘wrecking game’ by dieting TOO much

“I get more happiness from other stuff for less effort, so you have to recognise that and accept it.

“That’s probably why I’m scared to let go completely because it’s always been a good friend.”

O’Sullivan is set to return at the Northern Ireland Open which begins in Belfast on Sunday.

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‘He is a terrible person,’ slams darts star about former PDC boss as he prepares to quit tour after 17 years

DARTS star Vincent van der Voort has slammed Barry Hearn as a “terrible person”.

The Matchroom chief was the chairman of the PDC for two decades before stepping down and handing the role to his son Eddie in 2021.

vincent van der voort of netherlands in action during his second round match against adam hunt of england
Vincent van der Voort has slammed ex-PDC chief Barry Hearn
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Barry Hearn was in charge of darts for 20 years[/caption]

Hearn, 76, oversaw the rise of the PDC as they moved ahead of the BDO as darts’ biggest governing body.

Van der Voort, 48, competed in the old BDO tournaments before switching to the PDC alongside Michael van Gerwen in 2007.

With the Dutch veteran now eyeing retirement, he was asked if he would be waved off by Hearn.

Van der Voort replied on the Darts Draait Door podcast: “I consider that chance very small.

“He’s a great businessman. He has really been an icon for the sport of darts, what he has put down.

“On a personal level he is a terrible person, I think.

“In terms of business we couldn’t have wished for a better one.”

Van der Voort has featured 17 times at the World Championships during his lengthy career, making the quarter-final in 2011 and 2015.

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And hopes to qualify this year despite taking time away from the tour.

He said: “To say goodbye in a dignified way would be nice.

“Of course, it’s not for everyone. I also know what it is like to go to the World Championship and then you wake up in the morning already a little tense during the drive to Alexandra Palace.

“The feeling in the hall, throwing in. That would be nice to experience again.”

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