Det Ch Insp Gardner said Clifford had shown a "complete inability and unwillingness... to actually deal with [the break-up] appropriately".
Speaking following his death, Ahmad's family said he had arrived in the UK after fleeing Homs in Syria, where he had been injured in a bombing.They said he had been living in South Wales area before moving to Huddersfield.
Homs was the scene of fierce fighting in the country's civil war, which began in 2011 following anti-government protests against former president, Bashar al-Assad.The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights estimated that more than 650,000 people were killed in the 13-year conflict.In a statement his family he said had been "full of hope and dreamed of becoming a doctor—wanting to heal others after all he had endured".
Huge piles of rubbish dumped and left to rot at a play park since March have made parents and children "sick to their stomachs", councillors have heard.Yew Hills Road play area in Huddersfield has become a fly-tipping "grot spot" with old mattresses and luggage also strewn about the green space, a meeting was told.
One ward councillor told members of Kirklees Council's cabinet that "children should be able to play safely there" and volunteers should not have to pick up the waste.
The council said part of the issue was the local authority's budget restraints but that it would do "whatever we can to make it safe".That is generating "more complicated commissions" and "driving the need" to expand Goodwood to have more space, Rolls-Royce chief executive Chris Brownridge told Radio 4's Today programme.
But making individually tailored cars, while profitable, is a labour-intensive process that requires time and space.At the same time, like other manufacturers, the company is preparing for a future in which conventional cars will be phased out and replaced by electric models.
In the UK, the Labour government has committed to phasing out sales of petrol and diesel cars by 2030, and is consulting car manufacturers on how that will work.Mr Brownridge declined to tell the BBC whether the firm would still be building cars with combustion engines for clients abroad in 2030, but said the firm had a "very clear roadmap" and that electric cars were the "right direction for Rolls-Royce".