Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Man jailed for murder of Mother Teresa's ex-assistant in UK

A man in the UK has been sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder of a charity worker, who worked with Mother Teresa as a special assistant in Calcutta in the early 1990s and also helped set up schools for girls in India.

Colin Payne, 61, was found guilty of murdering 54-year-old Mark Bloomfield in July last year at Swansea Crown Court in Wales this week.


The court heard that Payne, a martial arts expert, had launched an attack on Bloomfield to "teach him a lesson" after he had brushed his girlfriend''s back with a beer can at a pub in Swansea.

"Mark Bloomfield built a legacy that will continue to live on in the countless lives that he encountered. As special assistant to Mother Teresa in Calcutta, he was an essential contributor to her mission and to those she cared for," read a family's tribute statement.

"In India, he organised free cataract surgery camps and founded schools that gave rare access to education for girls. In Africa, he helped preserve wild game by introducing ultralight aircraft to combat the onslaught of poachers," it noted.

According to The Daily Telegraph, during his time with Mother Teresa's Missionaries of Charity in Calcutta, now Kolkata, Bloomfield helped people who were terminally ill have dignified deaths. He later went on to work with the nuns to open schools for girls in different parts of India.

"All that Bloomfield did that day in the Full Moon (pub) was to touch your girlfriend's back momentarily with a beer can. That cost him his life," Judge Paul Thomas said in court on Thursday.

"You wanted to show regulars you were not a man who would be trifled with. You had an image to protect as self-styled hard man. You are a man in his sixties who resorts to great violence for slightest provocations and to cement your rep [reputation]," he said.

Payne had pleaded guilty to lesser charges of perverting the course of justice and manslaughter claiming self-defence, but was instead found guilty of murder following the trial.

The court was told how he dragged Bloomfield to the floor by his throat and kicked him in his head, before taking the attack outside and punching "two expert blows" to his head.

Bloomfield was knocked to the ground after hitting his head on the concrete, never to regain consciousness, and died in hospital two days later.

More For You

UK Social Media

Platforms including Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok and X were all referenced during the wider discussion

iStock

UK child safety debate shifts to who should control online age verification

  • Meta Platforms wants age verification checks handled through smartphone operating systems rather than individual apps.
  • The UK government is considering whether under-16s should be banned from social media platforms.
  • Police chiefs and regulators are calling for stricter protections for children online.

Meta Platforms is urging the UK government to place age verification checks directly into smartphones rather than forcing individual apps to handle the process, as Labour weighs tougher restrictions on children using social media.

Executives from Meta, including Antigone Davis, have reportedly met senior UK government officials and communications regulator Ofcom in recent days to discuss online child safety rules and possible restrictions for under-16s.

Keep ReadingShow less