A UK charity is offering up a £10,000 reward to anyone with information that would lead to the catching of the killer of a man who was shot in the head at a set of traffic lights in Glasgow.

Kenny Reilly, 29, died after being targeted at the junction of Maryhill Road and Bilsland Drive in Glasgow on April 16 last year.

He died in the city's Royal Infirmary two days later but, despite a series of appeals, the murder remains unsolved.

The charity Crimestoppers has now put up a reward on the first anniversary of the shooting.

READ MORE: Kenny Reilly fighting for life after drive-by shooting in Glasgow 

A Crimestoppers spokesman said: "Violence, on this level, with shots being fired into a car on a main road during the evening, is extremely distressing.

"The victim leaves behind a girlfriend and a young son.

"We are well aware that some people feel unable to speak directly to authorities, which is why our charity is here to give people options.

"If you have any information about who was responsible for this attack, you can contact us and stay 100% anonymous by calling 0800 555 111 or by using our anonymous online form."

READ MORE: Kenny Reilly: Police reveal details of car involved in fatal Glasgow shooting

The reward will expire on 12 July and to qualify the information must lead to the arrest and conviction of those responsible.

Mr Reilly was sitting in the passenger seat of a silver BMW when a black Ford S Max pulled up and a passenger, wearing a black balaclava, got out of the car and shot him.

He was taken via ambulance to Glasgow Royal Infirmary but died just a few days later.

In February police said a second car, a blue Volkswagen Polo, which was seen in the area before and after the shooting, was of interest.

The Herald:

The vehicle, which had been fitted with false plates, was stolen from the University of Glasgow School of Veterinary Medicine in Maryhill in September 2017.

The investigation took a turn in May, last tear after forensic evidence carried out on a burnt-out car found in Craigieburn Gardens, close to the scene of Kenny’s murder in Maryhill Road proved that this was the car used in the shooting.

The car in question had been stolen a month prior to the shooting from the Gifnock area in Glasgow.

Detective Superintendent Kenny Graham, the senior investigating officer on the case also confirmed that police had sightings of the vehicle between the date it was stolen and the date of the shooting.

In June, police arrested seven suspects over the murder.

The men, aged between 22 and 38, were arrested at a number of locations in the city. 

No one was charged and they were released pending more enquiries into the death of the 29-year-old in Maryhill.