Except it wasn't. "It was not easy," says Ms Waaddao, who organises Bangkok Pride March.
A 14-year-old girl and a 37-year-old woman were also been arrested on suspicion of assisting an offender, police said.Det Ch Insp Tony Platten said the incident had "rocked the local community".
He called for anyone with information to contact the force.Earlier, Ibrahima's father left flowers at the scene of the attack.His mother had to be held up by loved ones while his crying father showed reporters an image of his son on his mobile phone and repeated "he's been killed" before laying flowers where the attack happened beside a picture of Ibrahima and tributes from the community.
According to a resident quoted by the, the boy reportedly ran to a home nearby on Nevin Road after he was hurt and told the resident "I don't want to die".
One of the messages left at the scene read 'things need to change, knives down gloves up'.
Another said: "Our thoughts and prayers are with the family at this horrific time. There are good people in this city, we pray for your son."Eavis said she had asked a meeting of 250 Glastonbury staff whether anyone thought the festival was overcrowded last year, and no-one put their hand up.
"And I was like, [that's] interesting, because there's a lot of talk, some people think that it was."Festival-goers will be urged to use different routes and make use of the whole site to ease congestion.
"Interestingly, people have moved slightly differently since Covid. So they tend to move more in a herd," Eavis said. "So my main thing really this year is just to communicate that there are like 10 routes to anywhere."Organisers can predict which areas are likely to be busiest by tracking the most popular artists among fans who use the festival app's schedule planner.