“Evil” boyfriend guilty of sisters’ murders

LONDON, (Reuters) – A 29-year-old man who stabbed to  death his former girlfriend and her sister in a “brutal and  depraved” attack was found guilty of murder yesterday.

Mohammed Ali had not shown any remorse for the “horrific”  killing of Yasmine and Sabrina Larbi-Cherif, police said after  his conviction at Birmingham Crown Court.

Ali had spent five months in jail on remand after Yasmine,  22, accused him of rape in February last year.
But Yasmine withdrew the complaint in June 2008, saying she  could not cope with attending court and giving evidence.

In September, Ali went to the sisters’ Birmingham flat and  stabbed Yasmine and Sabrina, 19.
“He had left behind a scene of carnage,” said prosecutor  David Crigman, the Press Association reported.
“He had used violence of the most brutal and depraved kind  and he had killed two young girls.”
During the attack, Ali walked twice from the lounge to the  kitchen to rearm himself after breaking two knives.
The women’s partially clothed bodies were found dragged into  the blood-drenched apartment’s bedroom.
Yasmine had been stabbed twice and her sister more than 30  times.

Crigman said Ali’s attack on Sabrina was sadistic — her  wounds appeared to be made with precision rather than anger and  had drained all the blood from her body.

“At no stage has he shown any remorse or sorrow,” said  Detective Chief Inspector Joanne Clews.
Ali had failed to complete his cross-examination and had  refused to leave his prison cell to attend court, she added.

“From what I have learnt during this investigation, I  believe that Mohammed Ali is a monster … Ali is a violent,  controlling and evil man, who had no respect for Yasmine during  their relationship.”

Ali told his friends he was Moroccan but the court heard he  had been born in the Iraqi capital Baghdad.
He came to Britain in 1999 and was given indefinite leave to  stay after claiming asylum.
The sisters’ family, who moved to Britain from Algeria in  1998, welcomed the conviction.