Two sisters died a horrific death because the British immigration and asylum service is broken. Repeatedly stories emerge of bogus muslim (and other) asylum seekers living off the the purses of British taxpayers while these shams live their politically correct immigration service-facilitated lives built upon dishonesty and lies.
Thus is the situation that allowed Mohammed Ali to come into Britain - where he spun his tale of deceit and was given - by some soft headed bureaucrat - "exceptional leave" to remain in the UK. (The bureaucrat undoubtedly worried that denying Ali would bring the ususal muslim cries and accusations of "Islamophobia" and "racism".) Ali went on to brutally rape and slaughter two young sisters, Yasmine and Sabrina Larbi-Cherif- stabbing them with a ferocity that even horror fiction writer, Stephen King, couldn't fathom the carnage. Ali also performed sick, necrophiliac acts and left their bloody bodies shamefully exposed.
But this tragedy is not just about the broken British immigration service it is also about a murderer- likely influenced by the Islamic teachings regarding the worth of women and the punishment of "disobedient" women as well as the cycle of denial, hope and fear of domestic abuse.
Yasmin eventually found the courage to break away from her abuser. Sadly she and her sister paid the ultimate price for this quest for freedom.
They lie dead - killed by a man -who shouldn't have even been living in the UK.
Sadistic asylum-seeking sex killer convicted of stabbing to death girlfriend and her sister
By Andy Dolan and David Wilkes
Last updated at 4:29 PM on 22nd May 2009
An 'evil, controlling monster' who stabbed his girlfriend and her sister to death in a frenzied attack may have lied about his past to gain entry to Britain, it was revealed today.
Mohammed Ali, 29, left behind a scene of what police called 'unimaginable carnage and destruction' after killing Yasmine and Sabrina Larbi-Cherif in their city centre apartment.
Ali - who had been charged with raping his 'on-off' lover Yasmine, 22, months before he killed her and her 19 year old sibling - was today found guilty of murdering them both after a 12 day trial.
Tragic sisters: Yasmine, 22, (right) and Sabrina Larbi-Cherif, 19, were both stabbed to death in their flat
And today it emerged he is suspected of duping immigration officers into believing he is an Iraqi from Baghdad when he arrived in the UK ten years ago.
His claim for asylum was refused, but he was given 'exceptional leave' to remain here because of the situation in Iraq, an immigration source said. Four years later he was granted indefinite leave to remain.
But Birmingham Crown Court heard Ali had boasted to friends that he was actually from Morocco. Police are also convinced he is North African, if not from Morocco then, like his victims, from neighbouring Algeria.
He met Yasmine in a Birmingham bar in 2006 and the pair became involved in a turbulent relationship which saw her fall pregnant twice, both times having an abortion.
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She had moved to Birmingham from the family home in Wembley, North London, to study, but had dropped out of her chemistry degree at Birmingham University to become a translator.
Sabrina, who was due to start a French degree at the same unviversity, followed her north two weeks before they were murdered.
The sisters, who had obtained British citizenship in 2004, shared a room in the two-bedroom flat, which they shared with a third tennant.
Ali was captured on CCTV entering their Birmingham apartment block before leaving again - dressed in his victims' clothes - 44 minutes later. In between, he had launched a ferocious attack using knives from the girls' kitchen. It was so brutal he broke two knives in the process.
Sabrina was stabbed 35 times in her right breast alone. Police believe Ali may have turned on her after she arrived home to discover him attacking her sister in the lounge. Yasmine was stabbed in the heart, with the blade almost coming out of the other side of her body.
Ali then dragged the sisters' bodies into the bedroom where he 'sexually interfeared with them', leaving the bodies naked from the waist down together on a bed.
The alarm was raised by their family, who had contacted the building's concierge after becoming alarmed when the girls didn't call home as usual.
Ali was caught about to board a ferry at Dover docks two days after the murder in September last year. Police had circulated his name after identifying him as the prime suspect because of the rape allegations Yasmine made against him months earlier.
Carnage: The bodies of Yasmine and Sabrina had been dragged from the lounge into the bedroom in their blood-soaked flat
She had gone to police in February last year with allegations which resulted in Ali being remanded in custody charged with six rapes, five sexual assaults and one count of actual bodily harm.
In June, Yasmine retracted her complaint, claiming she could not face the ordeal of giving evidence in court and Ali was released the following month when all charges were dropped.
Shortly afterwards, the pair resumed their relationship, although in the days leading up to the killing text messages suggested Yasmine had wanted to end it, accusing Ali of failing to 'respect' her.
Ali, who lived in a hostel in Birmingham, admitted the manslaughter of the women but denied their murder.
He but told the jury he had 'snapped' and stabbed Yasmine when she laughed at him as they discussed his time behind bars and the earlier terminations, then turned on Sabrina when she returned from a walk during the attack.
But he walked out of the witness box when he was cross-examined about his claims, and did not return to court for the rest of the trial. He will be sentenced at a later date.
After the verdicts, Detective Chief Inspector Joanne Clews said: 'I believe that Ali is a violent, controlling and evil man, who had no respect for Yasmine during their relationship.
His attack on the girls was completely depraved. From what I have learnt during this investigation, I believe that Mohammed Ali is a monster.'
Today the sisters' family said in a statement: 'Yasmine’s only mistake was her refusal to submit to such an abusive, vicious and evil individual, whilst Sabrina’s was her brave attempt to stop this monster from killing her sister.
'This verdict will not bring back our ‘angels’, but it will ensure that this barbaric killer will be placed behind bars for a very long time, and he will never get the chance to inflict any such suffering on any other family.'
A UK Borders Agency spokesman said: 'Any non-EEA foreign national sentenced to 12 months or more is automatically considered for deportation.'
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