The chemical attacker who led police on a three-week manhunt before his body was discovered in the River Thames has reportedly been given a Muslim burial.
Abdul Ezedi was buried at an undisclosed location in East London on March 11 after he was pulled from the river last month. Ezedi, 35, had been wanted for the chemical attack on his ex-partner and her two daughters in Clapham last month in an assault which left the mum in hospital.
Originally from Afghanistan, Ezedi claimed asylum in the UK based on his claims he was a Christian escaping persecution for his faith. However, a clip from a BBC documentary on the nationwide search for him aired on Tuesday night shows his coffin being lowered into the ground after his funeral was reportedly held at a mosque in West London.
Questions are now being asked about why Ezedi was still in the country two years after his asylum claim was rejected. Months before the attack, Ezedi was placed on the sex offenders register at Newcastle Crown Court after being convicted in 2018 of sexual assault and indecent exposure.
Shadow Home Secretary Yvette Cooper meanwhile has demanded answers from Home Secretary James Cleverly, describing the case as "disturbing" and raising "serious and urgent questions" for the Home Office. The Labour MP said: "The Home Secretary must explain why his department failed to remove Ezedi from the UK in the two years after his first asylum claim was rejected - particularly after he was convicted of sexual offences."
Brit 'saw her insides' after being cut open by propeller on luxury diving tripGrainy black and white footage which has emerged shows Ezedi being baptised at a church in Jarrow, Tyne and Wear, in 2018 as documents revealed he had made a series of blunders in an interview suggesting he was lying about his faith, including claims the Old Testament was about Jesus Christ. Despite having been found to have "not been honest in several aspects of his account", Ezedi, who arrived in the UK in 2016, was granted asylum by a judge after the Home Office's decision was appealed.
On January 31 this year, a woman and her two daughters were rushed to hospital after a corrosive substance was thrown at the mother on a street in Clapham, South London. Detectives at the Metropolitan Police launched an urgent search for Ezedi, who crashed his car shortly afterwards and took the London Underground.
He was seen shortly after the attack in a Tesco store in Islington, before CCTV captured him on Chelsea Bridge where he ultimately vanished from sight. Search teams raided properties in London and Newcastle, where he had been living, as well as scouring the river.
A body was later discovered on February 19 and confirmed to be that of Ezedi four days later.