March saw a heroic bus station manager save the life of a 14-month-old baby.

Hasan Polat was called upon when Enfield mother Ruby Byrne ran to him, desperate for someone to help her son.

Mr Polat, a station supervisor, said: “The baby was completely blue, and I hit the baby's back to see if he was choking but that didn’t work.

As Mr Polat revived the baby after he stopped breathing, Mr Gilroy called the ambulance where the toddler was taken to hospital.

A murderer from Enfield was sentenced to life in prison for a "brutal" killing last year.

Malachi Lindo, 27, of Bowles Green, Enfield, was told he will serve a minimum of 14 years behind bars after the killing of Phillip Steels, 51, in Green Street, Enfield.

The attack took place in the early hours of Thursday, September 4, 2014, when Lindo had taken a concoction of drugs, including cannabis and ethylone or MDEA, and randomly happened upon Mr Steels in the street.

A confrontation followed and Lindo used a house brick to repeatedly strike Mr Steels' head, killing him.

Finally, on March 25, Parents gave mixed views about a clampdown on those who park illegally while on the school run.

Enfield Council set up a “rapid response” team after revealing the ten worst schools for parents parking illegally at dropping off and picking up time.

Parents outside St Andrews Primary School, in Churchbury Lane, where 181 people received parking tickets between January 1 and December 31 last year, were indecisive on the latest scheme.

Despite a majority of parents being in favour of the pilot programme, some warned it could become a cash cow for the local authority.