Man shot dead in front of family on Christmas Eve named
Flamur Beqiri suffered injuries near his home in south-west London.
A man who was shot dead in front of his family near their Battersea home on Christmas Eve has been named as Swedish national Flamur Beqiri.
The 36-year-old was found with gunshot injuries shortly after 9pm on Tuesday.
Metropolitan Police officers were called to the house on Battersea Church Road, in south-west London, after reports of gunshots and Mr Beqiri was pronounced dead at the scene.
No arrests have been made and a post-mortem will be held in due course.
According to media reports, Mr Beqiri is the brother of former Real Housewives Of Cheshire star Misse Beqiri.
“They have been devastated by this horrible event and are being supported by specialist officers.
“We know that the victim was returning home with his wife and young child following an evening out, when he was shot just yards from his home.
“The assailant then fled on foot in the direction of Battersea Bridge Road.”
Mr Beqiri is reported to have married his wife, Debora Krasniqi, in Cernobbio by Lake Como, Italy, in October 2018.
An article in Grace Ormonde Wedding Style magazine, which published photos of the occasion, revealed the couple first met through Facebook.
Ms Krasniqi told the magazine that the pair, initially just friends, “fell deeply in love” at his sister’s wedding after speaking for “endless hours over the phone”.
“There was always something special about our connection and bond,” she said.
Neighbours living near the scene of the shooting described hearing multiple gunshots followed by a woman screaming “desperately” for help.
Mrs Amati told the PA news agency: “I then heard the screams of the wife. I came out and realised it was one of my neighbours.
“He was lying in front of his doorway in a pool of blood. He was still alive. We were really hoping he would make it.
“You have no idea how desperate she (his wife) sounded.”
The death is the 142nd homicide identified by the PA news agency in London in 2019, the highest number in a calendar year since 2008.
Last year, there were 141 police-recorded homicides in the capital, according to Home Office statistics.