Mother of boys killed by father hands in petition to the PM Published duration 24 January 2017

image copyright Other image caption Claire Throssell's sons Jack and Paul Sykes died following a house fire in October 2014

The mother of two boys killed in a house fire started by their father has handed in a petition at Downing Street calling for a change in the law governing access to children.

Jack and Paul Sykes, aged 12 and nine, died when their father Darren, 44, set fire to the property in Penistone on 22 October 2014. Mr Sykes was also killed.

The children were on a weekend access visit after the family had split up.

Their mother Claire Throssell said that "children's voices needed to be heard".

More than 40,000 people have signed the petition, supported by Women's Aid, which calls for "the government and family courts to ensure there are no further avoidable child deaths as a result of unsafe child contact with a perpetrator of domestic abuse".

'Allowed their voice'

Ms Throssell said she had previously warned a judge that her ex-husband would "either kill or significantly harm the boys".

"He was on the edge", she said.

"He threatened to commit suicide a couple of months earlier and he just wasn't in the right place at the time to have safe contact with the two boys.

"What we need to do is to make sure children are at the heart of every decision made and they are allowed their voice.

"Jack never had his voice heard until he was in the fire and he said to the fireman 'my dad did this and he did it on purpose'.

image caption The petition was handed in at 10 Downing Street by a delegation including Claire Throssell (right)

An inquest into the boys' deaths heard they had been lured to their father's home with a new model train set before Sykes, who had recently separated from Ms Throssell, set fire to the building.

Sykes and Paul died in the fire, while Jack died in hospital six days later.

image caption The coroner's inquest heard the boy's father had lured them to the house with a new train set