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United KingdomCulture3 days ago

Parents of boy who drowned during 'catastrophic' May heatwave issue plea - 'please keep out of open water'

The parents of an 11-year-old boy who drowned during the recent heatwave in the UK have issued a heartfelt plea to other families to keep children away from open water. The child, Mackenzie, was described as a 'sensitive soul' who unexpectedly went into a river near his home during the extreme heat, despite not knowing how to swim. His parents, Michael Swift and Suzie Gough, spoke exclusively to the Mirror for the 'Save Lives for Sam' water safety campaign.

A heartbroken mum and dad said the “bottom of our world fell out” after their little boy drowned in the last 'catastrophic' heatwave. Michael Swift and Suzie Gough have broken their silence to urge families to avoid the open water after their 11-year-old 'little rock' and 'sensitive soul' died.

They told the Mirror , never in their wildest dreams did they think Mackenzie, would ever go anywhere near a river. But during the last blistering heatwave Mackenzie, known as ‘Kenzie,’ stopped playing outside his home and cycled with a pal to a river just a mile away.

He dropped his bike on a little area called ‘Pebble Beach,’ took his shoes and top off and went into the water despite not being able to swim .

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His grief-stricken mum and dad, Michael, 46, and mum Suzie, 48, from Mexborough in South Yorkshire, are today pleading with other children: “Please keep out of open water”.

They were speaking for the first time since the tragedy to support the Mirror’s ‘Save Lives for Sam’ water safety campaign. “We are desperate to stop other families having to go through heartbreak like this,” they said.

Michael in a message to other children pleaded: “Please don’t do it to your parents because this has broken me. I had to go and identify Kenzie’s body. It was like he was asleep and would not wake up. I told him I loved him and he was with his nannan and grandad now. I don’t want anyone to go through what we’ve had to go through with Kenzie.”

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During the last week of May, Mackenzie was one of 13 children who died. Six more adults also drowned.

The Mirror, backed by bereaved families, charities and Olympians, are pleading for an immediate public awareness campaign ahead of the summer, when it is feared more children could die.

Mackenzie, who was in the process of being officially diagnosed with autism, had been out shopping in Doncaster with his mum and little brother Carter on the Saturday he drowned. He’d managed to persuade his mum to buy him a new tracksuit, then told his dad he ‘owed his mum’ the cash for it.

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Michael laughs: “He was my cheeky little monkey. “ He explains how he has to laugh or he will cry.

“And I’m scared to cry in case I can’t stop. He was my little life saver and kept me going, even after my mum died. Now he will be forever 11,“ he said.

Kenzie’s mum Suzie described him as a “mummy's boy” who “loved his quiet time and only gave cuddles and kisses on his terms. I used to call him my sensitive soul and my munchkin. He was a sensitive boy who loved his quiet time and his night time phone calls” to his friends, she said.

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An inquest into Mackenzie’s death opened and adjourned on Thursday. His body was released for the funeral to be held.

His dad told the Mirror he’d been out fishing when he got a call from Mackenzie’s mum to say the police were at her house and their son was missing. “I went to Suzie’s and asked where the last time he was seen was and they said ‘pebble beach’. My heart sank! I knew it well. I ran all the way there, it was a mile away and took me about ten minutes.

“Only when I got to the river though did I realise how serious it was because of how many police were there and that’s when the bottom fell out of my world. The bottom fell out of our world.

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“We’ve been told his (Kenzie's) friend ran for help. He found a man on the bank who phoned 999. Kenzie's bike was on the pebbles along with his top and trainers."

The family then faced an agonising three day wait until Mackenzie's body was finally recovered on June 2nd. “That night I was on the bridge and spent the next two days out scouring the river banks.” The River Don was searched by specialist teams, police divers and family friends in boats. One of those was Michael’s best friend Dale Coles, who waded out up to his neck searching for Mackenzie.

But sadly his body was eventually found just yards from where he first went missing. It was in the opposite direction of where the search was concentrated.

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Michael has since returned to the scene several times and finds “calm” amongst the “devastation” as he walks along the bridge which has been covered in tributes to his son

But as we walk with him, the dad doesn’t look at the balloons, solar lights and images of Yoda, which was Mackenzie’s favourite teddy bear - but instead stares down at the water below where his son’s body was found.

“It looks all calm but that dark water is deep and deadly,” Michael warns. He explains how he took Carter, Mackenzie’s little brother, aged eight, to the scene recently to see the tributes to his big brother.

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"He said to me; "It doesn’t look dangerous dad’. So I put this stick near the bank and for a few feet you could feel the bottom and then this 6ft stick just vanished. You don’t know what’s underneath.

“His brother, Carter, has been ‘powering on like a trooper’. I asked him why he's being so strong like this and he said ‘because you and my mum were so strong.

“We used to go to this area as kids too. That beach is like a little oasis and the


Read the full article at Daily Mirror →
Source document: Coroner Alison Norton

2 reports

Daily MirrorParty-alignedCenter3 days ago
Girl, 13, drowned in river during heatwave was at a birthday family barbecue day before turning 14

A 13-year-old girl named Palwasha Akbar drowned in the River Wharfe in North Yorkshire on May 31, 2026, during a heatwave. She was at a family barbecue celebrating her upcoming 14th birthday the day before her death. A coroner confirmed the cause of death as drowning. Her family released a statement following her passing.

Bias read (Center): The article reports on a tragic incident involving a young person's death during a heatwave. It provides factual details without apparent ideological framing, loaded language, or biased sourcing. The focus is on the event itself rather than any political or social issue.

Official sources cited

  • government Coroner Alison Norton
Daily MirrorParty-alignedCenter7 days ago
Parents of boy who drowned during 'catastrophic' May heatwave issue plea - 'please keep out of open water'

The parents of an 11-year-old boy who drowned during the recent heatwave in the UK have issued a heartfelt plea to other families to keep children away from open water. The child, Mackenzie, was described as a 'sensitive soul' who unexpectedly went into a river near his home during the extreme heat, despite not knowing how to swim. His parents, Michael Swift and Suzie Gough, spoke exclusively to the Mirror for the 'Save Lives for Sam' water safety campaign.

Bias read (Center): The article focuses on a tragic incident involving a child's death and a public safety plea. There is no overt political framing, ideological emphasis, or biased language. The content is primarily emotional and aimed at raising awareness rather than promoting any particular political viewpoint.

Go to the primary sources (1)

The official sources this coverage is built on. Read them directly to bypass framing.

  • governmentCoroner Alison Norton