Suicide: Sales manager Sharon Bukokhe, of
Levenshulme, Manchester, was a high achiever working for a family
planning charity but felt lonely as relatives including her husband
lived in other countries
A glamorous 28-year-old businesswoman
killed herself because she struggled to cope with living alone in
Britain with her family dispersed across the world, an inquest heard
yesterday.
Sales manager
Sharon Bukokhe, of Levenshulme, Manchester, was a high achiever working
for a family planning charity but felt lonely because relatives
including her husband lived abroad.
Mrs
Bukokhe, who was originally from Kenya, used her laptop to research
ways to commit suicide, applied full make up and painted her nails then
suffocated herself at her flat in April.
A diary found after her death
said: ‘I think that any life is as valid as the next, such that an
ending of 25 is as good as 88. I have no real regrets or fears any more,
I just feel decisive and justified.’
Mrs
Bukokhe, who appeared to friends to be ‘the happiest person in the
world’, settled in the UK in 2002 and graduated in design and
engineering at Nottingham Trent University, the inquest heard.
She was later appointed sales
manager of a charity helping with family planning issues involving third
world countries. But Mrs Bukokhe was deeply affected by her family
living in other countries.
Her
husband lived in South Africa so he could complete a Master’s Degree
whilst her mother lived in Richmond, Virginia, in the US, and her sister
lived in Canada.
Her only
relative in Britain was her brother who lived 250 miles away in
Gillingham, Kent and as a result of her feelings of loneliness she was
diagnosed with bipolar disorder.
Tragic: Mrs Bukokhe, who was originally from
Kenya, used her laptop to research ways to commit suicide, applied full
make up and painted her nails then suffocated herself at her flat in
April
Mrs Bukokhe’s sister Caroline
Lusiche, who flew in from Canada to be at the inquest in Manchester
said: ‘There were many factors which led to it.
'I
think that any life is as valid as the next, such that an ending of 25
is as good as 88. I have no real regrets or fears any more, I just feel
decisive and justified'
Diary entry by Sharon Bukokhe
‘She was a high achiever, her marriage
was also a big factor. She wanted it to succeed but he was in South
Africa doing his masters. She moved and they decided to put that
marriage on hold.
‘She had
come here as a very young girl and it really affected her that we were
all dispersed in different countries. In the last few days we had been
trying to get back in touch with each other.
‘But
because of the time difference- me in Canada - we kept missing each
other. I sent her an email and did not hear back then I heard.
‘She
was trying to be the one to bring the family together, she had a lot on
her shoulders weighing on her. She had high objectives we were taught
to hold our chin up and get on with it.
Glamorous: She was sales manager of a charity helping with family planning issues in third world countries
‘She tried to persevere she wanted to do that to protect your feelings - she didn’t want to make you feel bad.’
'She
was a high achiever, her marriage was also a big factor. She wanted it
to succeed but he was in South Africa doing his masters. She moved and
they decided to put that marriage on hold'
Caroline Lusiche, Mrs Bukokhe's sister
Mrs Bukokhe’s flatmate of two years,
Stefanie Maccalli, told the hearing: ‘She was a really artistic,
creative person, very active - and I think everybody who didn’t know her
particularly well found her the happiest person in the world.
‘I
would say the creative and joy and artistic side was real but the
happiness she was showing all the time was not always real. There were
times when she was not this happy, outgoing person.
'The
two years I knew her where divided into a two periods, the first she
was taking medication for the bipolar and she was always very happy.
‘In
the second part she changed the amount of medication. She would have
ups and downs every few weeks. When low she would not like to talk too
much and would take a day off work and stay in her room and watch
movies.
Intelligent: Mrs Bukokhe, who appeared to
friends to be 'the happiest person in the world', settled in the UK in
2002 and graduated in design and engineering at Nottingham Trent
University (left), the inquest heard
‘She was always trying to find a
balance. She started saying things like she could not show weakness, she
felt guilty about being dull.’
Ms Maccalli said that the last time she saw her was on April 24, in the kitchen of their shared home.
'She
was a really artistic, creative person, very active and I think
everybody who didn’t know her particularly well found her the happiest
person in the world'
Stefanie Maccalli, Mrs Bukokhe's flatmate
‘She told me that she was thinking
about buying a house, she was taking in a very positive way about the
future - but her eyes did not show that,’ Ms Maccalli said.
‘She
took her food upstairs so I got that she was in one of her low moods.
The last look she gave me, I got the feeling it was kind of a serious
look. I had a bad feeling.’
Ms
Maccalli added that the next couple of nights she arrived home late but
had become concerned that neither she nor her other housemate had seen
Mrs Bukokhe.
‘I decided to
check Facebook to see if she had gone somewhere but I couldn’t find her
profile. That was the moment everything started clicking,’ she said. ‘I
sent her a text to her mobile. Part of me was already thinking something
bad.’
Cut off: Her only relative in Britain was her
brother who lived 250 miles away in Gillingham, Kent and as a result of
her feelings of loneliness she was diagnosed with bipolar disorder
‘We tried to open the door it wouldn’t
open - it was obvious that it was closed from the inside. We decided to
try and break the door, we looked inside and she was on the floor in
front of the door.
‘She was dressed with make-up and her nails done, she looked like she had been somewhere nice or she was just going somewhere.’
'When I found out it shocked me very much. She always put a brave face on, she said she did feel very lonely'
Dr Javaid Khan, Mrs Bukokhe's doctor
The inquest was told Mrs Bukokhe had last seen her doctor, Dr Javaid Khan, in March this year.
He
told the inquest that she had stopped taking her medication in January,
and said she was feeling low and her sleep was variable and she had a
lack of motivation.
Dr Khan
said: ‘She was having suicidal thoughts but she could put them aside.
She was not a severe type of manic depression, there was a low
assessment of suicide.
‘When I found out it shocked me very much. She always put a brave face on, she said she did feel very lonely.’
Recording
a verdict of suicide, Deputy Coroner for Manchester Carolyn Singleton
said: ‘I’m sure that Sharon intended to kill herself.’
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