Her estranged husband Rowan Baxter poured petrol on his family and died near the car from self-inflicted wounds after the domestic violence incident. It is understood the couple had separated in November and were working on custody arrangements. "A statement issued by Belmont State School, where Aaliyah and Laianah were students, said counselling was being made available to students and staff. Hannah Clarke, 31, also known as Hannah Baxter, was pulled alive from the driver's seat of the family car as it was engulfed by flames on a Camp Hill street about 8:30am on Wednesday, during what should have been a routine school run. It doesn't matter whether it's the church, the football club, the politicians, the police, the schools, we've got to all work together. "She lived, breathed [her kids]. He was controlling. Forget about it, it's nothing compared to what's going on," he said. And this terrible, awful event, our hearts are just full of grief. "Our city, our state, our nation has been left shaken, appalled and desperately saddened at unimaginable tragedy that unfolded in the suburbs of Brisbane yesterday," Ms Palaszczuk said.

"The dynamics of a family that are broken and estranged are particularly poignant to this investigation and very hard to decipher," Detective Inspector Thompson said.Prime Minister Scott Morrison described the incident as "devastating" and encouraged victims of domestic violence to seek support. The deaths of a Brisbane mother and her three children have prompted an outpouring of anger, sadness and disbelief among family members, politicians, domestic violence advocates and the Australian community.Ms Clarke's estranged husband and the children's father, Rowan Baxter, allegedly doused his family with petrol.The 42-year-old former Warriors NRL player was found dead on a footpath with self-inflicted wounds.Detective Inspector Mark Thompson said Queensland police had "engaged with both Hannah and her estranged husband Rowan around domestic violence issues … and referred them both to support services". This is unbelievable what's going on. "Korri Lauder, who has known Ms Clarke for more than a decade, said her friend, who was a champion trampolinist, was "the definition of love". But she did know police would need details.“On the scene, she walked herself to the stretcher, put herself down and gave this description of what the monster had done and then apparently passed out going to the hospital and when she came to in ICU gave it all again,” Ms Clarke’s dad Lloyd Clarke told the “And it was just so strong, and obviously she wanted this monster to get caught. Experts explain why it wasn't enough. She was petrified”.“He could manipulate her.

"It doesn't feel real, it doesn't feel like it's her. "This service may include material from Agence France-Presse (AFP), APTN, Reuters, AAP, CNN and the BBC World Service which is copyright and cannot be reproduced.Space to play or pause, M to mute, left and right arrows to seek, up and down arrows for volume.Space to play or pause, M to mute, left and right arrows to seek, up and down arrows for volume.Hannah Clarke did 'everything she could to protect' her children, friend revealsFather kills mother and three children in suspected murder-suicideTerrifying last moments: A decade of domestic violence deaths in Hindu and Sikh communities'Their cross to bear': The Catholic women told to forgive domestic violenceRaped, tracked, humiliated: Clergy wives speak about domestic violenceThese women all died in 2015: 'they are not just statistics'ABC Open: People tell their domestic violence stories#ChurchToo: Christian victims of abuse join social media outpouringLive: Andrews urges vigilance after four deaths, 303 new coronavirus casesHow worried should you be about news the coronavirus is mutating into different strains?New Zealand working with Victorian authorities to trace source of outbreakFrom 102 to zero: How it all went wrong for NZ's elimination strategyFour men caught entering Queensland on a sailboat, as no new coronavirus cases recordedChina's coronavirus vaccine trials could deliver the goods — what does that mean for Australia?Fish kills man on Darwin harbour after 'launching' itself into boatAustralian father and son who both lied about their age to fight in history's deadliest conflictVictoria's downward trend of new cases continues as police dish out hundreds of finesCharting the pandemic: Victoria's second wave may have passed the peakIt took years for Rosie to realise she was being financially abused. 15 Aug, 2020 9:34am Quick Read. But in her final heroic act, she walked to the ambulance stretcher, stared down the barrel of the policemans body cam and told officers everything that happened.