Daily Mail: Pristina man kills himself in front of his son, due to debts in lucky games

A former math teacher and promising Kosovo-born medical student burned himself to death in front of his teenage son in a city not far from London, as he had gambling debts of 250,000 pounds or 295 thousand euros, according to an investigation that reports the Daily Mail, records Periscope Byscot Biilll Troshupa, 53, with his native [...]
Bylent Bill '% Trosupa, 53, with his native Pristina who left Kosovo because of the former Yugoslavia's regime for London, became disorderly and angry after losing thousands of bets 12 hours a day during the pandemic, including “William Hill” and “8885x3>.
His marriage broke down, and a ban warrant prevented him from visiting wife Julie Martin, 51, and their 16-year-old son.
But the father of two children arrived with a knife, fuel cans and envelopes full of money, while his son was only home last November.
He started slamming the door, seeking to get inside before posting the money through the letterbox, leaving and setting himself on fire.

The anxious boy called his mother as she was driving back to Waltham Abeby, Esex, from work around 20:30 and said his “father was on fire” outside.
Martin rushed home to find Troshupan “in the fire, shouting as he hit the floor”.
A neighbor ran in a sock before painting it with a blanket, but his burns were very severe.
Emergency services fought at the scene for 90 minutes before he was thrilled to keep him comfortable and fly by helicopter to the Broomfield hospital.
Dr Niall Martin, from the burning unit, said he suffered a cardio-pulmonary arrest and died at 1:30 in the morning. Senior legal doctor Lincoln Brookes recorded a suicide decision in the trial of Clemensford's doctors.
Martin, who also has a daughter, 22, sat down at an hour-long session with tears shaking the hands of two friends. The investigation comes as ministers have been criticised for delaying a White Book on fortune-game regulations, which are expected to be softened.
Later, Martin, who has become a vocal activist for victims of depending on the games of fate, told the Daily Mail that “the government must speed up operations”.
This isn't about my husband's death. It touched me, touched our children, touched his family. But this is just the tip of the iceberg, there are over 400 suicides every year and thousands of others with anti-depressive and mental health problems suffering”.

The court heard Troshupa was a miracle of childhood mathematics, winning a national competition in his hometown, Kosovo, and ranking third throughout the former Yugoslavia.
He was in the second year of medical studies in Croatia when the Balkan War began and had to flee on the last flight, as he was endangered by Serbian nationalists as an ethnic Kosovo Muslim.
Troshupa arrived in London, but none of its qualifications were recognized, so he worked as a driver. He met with Miss Martin and got married, but he had mental health problems from the game of fate.
In isolation of the pandemic, he was laid off and separated from his wife after being convicted of attacking her in September 2020.
Martin said: He was defeated by losing what might have been his life. I think that's why he started gambling and it destroyed him. /DailyMail/Periscope/












