The 76-year-old woman called at the police Sunday night. The first 15 hours later she was found – hostage behind a small things you can live that have gone into deadlock at the cemetery in Eslöv.
the toilet door went into deadlock and the 76-year-old woman was locked up for fifteen hours.
The 76-year-old Eslövskvinnan visit every Sunday her husband’s grave at the cemetery in Eslöv.
Relatives tell Skånskan that the 76-year-old went to the cemetery in Eslöv at the 14-time on Sunday.
When she came back in the evening was the relatives concerned and sounded the alarm to the police, who came with five patrols, and searched.
Although the guardian and hemtjänstens staff was during the Sunday evening was involved in the search, which took off around midnight and was concentrated to the area around the cemetery.
But first, early on Monday morning, at 05.15, found the 76-year-old. She sat locked up in one of the toilets.
“She was sad, shocked and upset and thought she had put into it for us,” says her son, to the newspaper Skånska Dagbladet.
The 76-year-old woman has diabetes and had no medicine with him, because she had only planned to be away from home for a short while.
Well found in the restroom, the woman had the high blood pressure and elevated sockervärde.
the newspaper Skånska Dagbladet reported that the woman had been locked in the bathroom. She was not out. Only when sökhundar passed the third time could the woman be traced and the police break up the lock.
— what if there had been someone with worse health than my mother? It would then have been able to end badly. I think of it as happened on Hansacompagniet in Malmö for example, tell the son to the newspaper Skånska Dagbladet.
He’s referring to the MS Vellingekvinna who has died at the Hansacompagniets disabled toilets shortly after that the social Insurance agency has taken the decision to reduce her assistance — just at the toilet.
the Swedish church regrets the 76-year-old woman’s experience in Eslöv, sweden, and says that kyrkogårdstoaletterna which have been subjected to repeated vandalism.
— It is very boring and does not feel at all good to somebody bad. We will do all we can that something like this should not happen again, ” says Peter Magnusson, kyrkogårds – and property manager for the Swedish church in Eslöv, to Skånskan.
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