The heartbroken partner of a mum who died in a skydiving accident intends to complete the same jump in her memory.
Although Scott Armstrong "doesn't know who [he] is without her", he now wants to keep Belinda's legacy alive by doing a skydive - at the same place where she fell to her death last week. The experienced instructor, 30-year-old Adam Harrison, also died in the horror near Dunkeswell Airfield, in Devon.
Belinda, who leaves behind four children and two grandchildren, and Adam were dead within two minutes of exiting the plane, having fell to the ground at 120mph. An investigation continues into their deaths, something Belinda's family have stressed is hugely important. Speaking yesterday, Belinda's eldest son, Connor Bowles, demanded "justice".
And Scott, who says he is "a shell without" Belinda, added: "To be honest, I'm dreading what's ahead... None of this was the plan." He had bought his partner the skydive a "thank you" present, he said, for letting his nine-year-old son move into their home.
READ MORE: Mum's final days before fatal skydiving fall from haunting joke to last-minute switch

Belinda, 48, had never jumped before, but was an adrenaline junkie who would try anything once. Devon and Cornwall Police, continuing to investigate, are believed to be analysing video footage from a camera which was attached to Adam, a seasoned instructor who had worked for this company - Skydive Buzz - since September 2021.
Scott told Mail Online: "She was the last jump before it shut [Skydive Buzz has been closed since the incident]. So I'd like to be the first jump when it opens back up again. I'd do it for her. If she was brave enough to jump out of a plane, then I want to do it, too."
Bachir Baaklini, who is Belinda's ex-husband, said: "Her kids want to know why their mum went to do something for fun and never made it back home. She was supposed to be safe. We need to know what happened." Bachir, a restaurant owner who was married to Belinda from 2003 to 2013, had two children with the woman and became a stepfather to her older sons, Connor and Jamie.
"She was a bit crazy. She was up for anything. She was a life-lover," Bachir, who met reflexologist Belinda when he was working in London as a barber.
Skydiving deaths are extremely rare. Globally, there is about one fatality per 100,000 skydives, and in Britain the figure is even lower. The British Parachute Association said that between 2001 and 2020, there were no tandem skydive fatalities.
Friends say Belinda, who before retraining as a reflexologist and a masseuse, was a dental nurse, would be undeterred by any statistics as she "loved exploring". Yet the daredevil, who lived in Totnes, Devon, with Scott, her daughter Emily and his son, was found dead in a field near Skydive Buzz's base.
The company, which first started operating in 1999, said it was "heartbroken" by the incident, adding: "Safety is, and always has been, our top priority." Devon and Cornwall Police said "enquiries remain ongoing".
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