Shropshire Star

Family mourn ‘beautiful’ British backpacker killed in Sydney

Local media reported suspect Brazil Gurung had faced money issues.

Published
Amelia Blake was found dead in the Newtown suburb of Sydney last Friday (Family handout/PA)

The family of a British woman killed in a suspected murder-suicide have said they are “deeply shocked and saddened” by her death.

Amelia Blake, 22, was found dead in the Newtown suburb of Sydney last Friday.

New South Wales Police Force said the body of a man in his 30s, named in reports as Nepalese chef Brazil Gurung, was also discovered in the flat, which is above a Persian restaurant in a road lined with bars and shops.

The flat above a restaurant in Sydney where Briton Amelia Blake was found dead (Ryan Wilkinson/PA)
The flat above a restaurant in Sydney where Briton Amelia Blake was found dead (Ryan Wilkinson/PA)

In a statement issued through the Foreign Office, her parents Chris and Sharon said: “We are deeply shocked and saddened by the sudden passing of our much loved daughter and sister Amelia, who will be truly missed by all who knew her.

“We would like to thank everyone for the love and support shown to our family.

“As we try to come to terms with losing our beautiful girl, we would very much appreciate privacy at this extremely difficult time.”

“Police attended and discovered the bodies of a woman, aged in her 20s, and a man, aged in his 30s,” police said.

Ms Blake, from Loughborough, in Leicestershire, had been travelling around Australia, recently working on a fruit farm in Victoria, and had reportedly been planning to set off travelling Vietnam.

Friends paid tribute on Facebook, with Ellie Mackness saying: “Whenever I saw her she always made me smile or laugh.

“She was the most warm hearted, bubbly, loving and down to earth women I knew.”

King Street in Newtown, Sydney (Ryan Wilkinson/PA)
Amelia Blake was found in Newtown, Sydney (Ryan Wilkinson/PA)

She said the former chef at the Fogo Brazilia Churrasco restaurant, where he met Ms Blake, had feared becoming homeless and described his life as a “living nightmare”.

Police said they were investigating the circumstances surrounding the deaths.

A police source told the Press Association the woman is thought to have been the victim of a murder-suicide.

King Street in Newtown, Sydney (Ryan Wilkinson/PA)

The area is popular with backpackers and foreign visitors attracted by its nightlife, cafes and cheaper rents.

A neighbour, who only gave his name as Angelo, said: “I’d guess there were four to six people living in there, I see the owner once every blue moon when he comes to collect rent or whatever.

“I feel sorry for the girl. My first reaction was ‘she’s 22? A bit young to be on her own’.”

Sorry, we are not accepting comments on this article.