Former Leeds university student pleads guilty to attempted murder and terror charges over Manchester Victoria New Year's Eve stabbings

A former Leeds university engineering student who launched a frenzied knife attack on commuters and police at Manchester Victoria railway station last New Year's Eve has today pleaded guilty to attempted murder and terror charges.

By Lucy Leeson Tuesday, 26th November 2019, 1:59 pm

Mahdi Mohamud, 26, raised the fillet knife and walked up behind unsuspecting James Knox, screaming "Allahu Akbar!" and "Long live the Caliphate!" as he stabbed his victim repeatedly in the back, shoulders and head.

He then turned the knife on Mr Knox's companion, Anna Charlton, slashing her across the face after the couple, in their 50s, randomly crossed his path heading for a tram platform shortly before 9pm last December 31.

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British Transport Police (BTP) officers heard a blood-curdling scream and dashed to the scene.

The wounded being treated following a knife attack at Manchester Victoria railway station. Mahdi Mohamud, 26, has pleaded guilty at Manchester Crown Court to a terrorism offence and three counts of attempted murder after the knife attack last New Year's Eve.

PC Ashleigh Williams, 27, and her colleague Marsha Selby, 28, along with two tram staff confronted Mohamud, who "like an animal" was "fixated" on stabbing and slashing, witnesses said.

The suspect was pepper sprayed before seconds later PC Tom Wright, 27, arrived along with Sergeant Lee Valentine, 31, who shot Mohamud with his Taser.

The barbs of the 50,000 volt shock gun got stuck in the knifeman's thick coat and failed to paralyse him. Before he could reload the knifeman ran along the blood-spattered platform charging at the officers with the weapon.

Police restraining a man after he stabbed three people at Victoria Station in Manchester. Mahdi Mohamud, 26, has pleaded guilty at Manchester Crown Court to a terrorism offence and three counts of attempted murder after the knife attack last New Year's Eve

A second kitchen knife was found in his waistband.

Mr Knox suffered 13 injuries including a skull fracture while Ms Charlton's right lung was punctured and she suffered a slash to her forehead that cut down to the bone.

The defendant, a Dutch national from a Somali family, had arrived in the UK aged nine and became radicalised online, Greater Manchester Police (GMP) said.

Detained under the Mental Health Act the day after the attack he was later found fit to stand trial.

Mohamud pleaded guilty at Manchester Crown Court on Tuesday to three counts of attempted murder.

He also admitted one count of the possession of a document or record likely to be useful to a person committing or preparing an act of terrorism, a manual titled, "the seven most lethal ways to strike with a knife".

He walked the mile to the busy city centre train station where he launched the attack, arriving shortly before 9pm and being captured on CCTV covering the station, next to Manchester Arena, the scene of the May 2017 suicide bombing which killed 22 people.

Footage showed him behind Mr Knox when he raised the knife and launched the attack with swift downward strokes, before attacking Ms Charlton.

Officers arrived and there was a brief a stand-off before the failed shot with the Taser and Mohamud ran at the officers with the knife.

Sgt Valentine said: "One of the things for me, obviously when I've landed on top of him being so close to his face to be literally like looking in his eyes and he's like - there's nothing there.

"The look on his face, not even that of like a madman, just somebody who was just like intent on...he just wasn't there. Like just, he just was not there, it was just like, it was just like an animal."

Mohamud was sectioned under the Mental Health Act the following day and taken to a secure mental health facility where he is currently detained.

He was deemed fit to be interviewed on February 19 and charged on May 19.

Police later recovered a large amount of what GMP called "counter-terrorism mindset material", including images and the document about how to carry out knife attacks.

Detectives say the planning for the attack began towards the end of 2017, when he had visited family in Somalia, with the defendant downloading radical hate material including speeches by Anwar al-Awlaki, the infamous US-born Islamist hate preacher, since killed in a drone strike in 2011 in Yemen.

Mohamud was known to mental health services but was not subject to a care plan at the time of the attack. Some years before he had been sectioned after voluntarily attending a hospital ward.

Then-prime minister Theresa May later joined the BTP in commending emergency services after the incident.

The four BTP officers and two tram staff all received BTP chief constable's commendations.

Alison Morgan QC, has begun opening the case for the prosecution before Mohamud will be sentenced later.

Ms Morgan, opening the case said: "Whilst it is accepted that the defendant suffered from a mental illness at the time of the attack on December 31 2018, the prosecution's case is that the attack at Victoria Station was not simply a product of that mental illness.

"It was intended to be a lethal attack, carefully planned over a number of months, reflecting the defendant's extremist ideology and his desire to perform violent jihad.

"The defendant's actions may have been disinhibited by his mental illness, but they were driven by an entrenched desire to undertake jihad against the West."

The court heard the defendant obtained publications by so-called Islamic State (IS) and had created and meticulously revised a document entitled Neurotechnology, an anti-government, anti-West conspiracy theory.

Ms Morgan added: "The defendant's expression of anti-Western sentiment after the attack is consistent with his long-held beliefs and demonstrates that the purpose of the attack was terrorist."

Mohamud has three brothers and one sister, all born in the Netherlands, and he was living with family at the time of the attack.

He travelled to and from Somalia on more than one occasion between 2016 and 2017, including visiting on August 11 2017 before returning in November 2018.

While there, he was taken to hospital in Somalia for three periods during 2016 to 2018, and during that time he accessed "significant extremist material" and began drafting documents that would later be of significance to the attack that he committed, the court heard.

He also accessed the document, '7 most lethal places to strike with a knife', downloading it to his iPhone. He returned to the UK on November 12, 2018, with a "schedule" or diary for carrying out his jihad with an "endgame" on December 31, the court was told.