Cricket bat used to club student to death, court told
A man "cursed by black magic" battered a defenceless student to death with a cricket bat, a murder trial jury was told.
Illegal immigrant Dawood Khan rained heavy blows on Nazeer Ahmed's head as he sat eating an afternoon meal, it is alleged.
Mr Ahmed, 22, who was a business administration student at Yorkshire College in Manningham Lane, Bradford, was found slumped dead on his sofa with a half-eaten chapatti in his lap.
advertisement
Khan, who lodged at Mr Ahmed's rented home in Rupert Street, Keighley, denies murdering him on May 31 last year.
Prosecutor Richard Mansell told Bradford Crown Court yesterday Mr Ahmed's body was discovered at about 3.45pm by Ajay Rajput, a semi-professional cricketer, who also shared the house.
Mr Ahmed, who had been studying at home, had two glasses of milk and a bowl of curry in front of him.
He was pronounced dead at the scene by paramedics.
Mr Ahmed, who came to the UK in 2005 on an education visa, was killed by repeated heavy blows from the bat.
"This was a brutal attack on a defenceless man, with multiple blows aimed at the head with a weapon," Mr Mansell said.
Pathologist Professor Christopher Milroy found that at least four blows were dealt to the head and two to the chest.
Mr Ahmed suffered a skull fracture and massive bruising to the head. He would have been knocked unconscious immediately.
A cricket bat in the kitchen at the terrace house had Mr Ahmed's blood on it, the jury heard.
A blood-stained towel was used to wipe blood from the dead man, or the murder's hands.
Mr Mansell said Khan was seen in an agitated state in Nadeem Food Store, in Cark Road, Keighley, at about 3.30pm that day. He paid £115 to two men to take him to Birmingham.
He was arrested at Sandbach Service Station in Cheshire hiding in a cubicle in the ladies' toilet.
Mr Mansell said spots of Mr Ahmed's blood were found on Khan's jeans and right training shoe.
The jury was told Khan's housemates will give evidence that he was showing signs of mental illness in the weeks before Mr Ahmed's death.
Mr Mansell said: "He was not eating and was making comments to the effect that he believed someone had put a black magic curse on him."
He was considered unfit for police interview, sectioned under the Mental Health Act, and had been in hospital since.
Khan, who entered the UK illegally from Afghanistan, told police he was 14.
Mr Mansell said the Crown did not know his age but he "appeared to be considerably older".
Mr Mansell said that Khan claims he was not at home when Mr Ahmed was killed.
He returned to find police at the house and fled because he was an illegal immigrant and feared imprisonment.
The jury heard that all other occupants of the house could be shown to have been at work at the time of the murder.
The evidence was compelling that Khan was guilty, said Mr Mansell.
If you liked this article and would like to share it with others on the web who might be searching for good content we've made it easy for you to do it.
At the bottom of all articles, you'll see links to six sites. These sites - commonly called 'social bookmark' or 'social news' sites - have large communities of web users who share and rate interesting, useful and fun things on the web.
Clicking the links will automatically add the address of the story you are reading to one of these sites, letting you share it with others. Each site will ask you to register to share stories. Registration is free and once a member, you can store, recommend and search for stories that interest you.