Footage of brutal stabbing of Syrian refugee released as man sentenced to life in prison for murder

Leeds Crown Court heard that Alfie Franco (top right) fatally stabbed 16-year-old Ahmad Al-Ibrahim (top left) on April 3 in Huddersfield after the victim brushed past Franco’s pregnant girlfriend while walking along a shopping street, footage below. (West Yorkshire Police/Screenshot)
Leeds Crown Court heard that Alfie Franco (top right) fatally stabbed 16-year-old Ahmad Al-Ibrahim (top left) on April 3 in Huddersfield after the victim brushed past Franco’s pregnant girlfriend while walking along a shopping street, footage below. (West Yorkshire Police/Screenshot)
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Updated 10 October 2025
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Footage of brutal stabbing of Syrian refugee released as man sentenced to life in prison for murder

Footage of brutal stabbing of Syrian refugee released as man sentenced to life in prison for murder
  • West Yorkshire Police confirmed Franco had been jailed for life with a minimum term of 23 years

LONDON: A 20-year-old man found guilty of murdering a Syrian refugee teenager in an unprovoked knife attack in an English town earlier this year has been sentenced to life in prison on Friday.

Leeds Crown Court heard that Alfie Franco fatally stabbed 16-year-old Ahmad Al-Ibrahim on April 3 in Huddersfield after the victim brushed past Franco’s pregnant girlfriend while walking along a shopping street.

West Yorkshire Police confirmed Franco had been jailed for life with a minimum term of 23 years.

CCTV footage released by the force showed a brief verbal exchange between the pair before Franco, who had taken a mix of cannabis, cocaine and ketamine, pulled a flick knife from his pocket and stabbed Ahmad once in the neck.

The teenager, who had fled conflict in Syria seeking safety in the UK, suffered catastrophic injuries, including wounds to his jugular vein, trachea and carotid artery, and died at the scene.

Franco fled but was later arrested and charged with murder.

During the trial, prosecutors told jurors that Franco had a “keen interest” in knives and had recorded himself handling the weapon used in the killing.

He had captioned a photo of his collection “Artillery coming along nice,” and had boasted to friends hours before the attack that he planned to stab someone.

Prosecutor Richard Wright said: “Alfie Franco is a young man with a keen interest in possessing, carrying and using deadly weapons for offensive, not defensive, purposes — just as he did the very next day when he stabbed Ahmad in the neck for no good reason.”

When questioned in court, Franco claimed he acted out of fear, telling jurors he carried the knife because he had “heard things that happen in town” and wanted to “keep safe.”

He later admitted during cross-examination that he had “murdered” Ahmad, saying: “Yes … I didn’t want to do that to anyone. I wish I could take it back but I can’t.”

Franco also admitted possessing a knife in a public place.

Following the verdict, Temporary Detective Superintendent Damian Roebuck of the Homicide and Major Enquiry Team said: “We welcome the sentencing of Franco for the dreadful and inexplicable murder of a teenager he had never met and who he had no quarrel with.”

He continued: “We never believed Franco’s claim that he acted in self-defense, especially as it was contradicted by CCTV evidence put before the court. Ahmad himself was not carrying a weapon of any kind, whereas Franco had taken to the streets that day carrying the concealed blade he used to inflict a savage injury on this poor young man.

“No sentence can ever bring back Ahmad, but we hope seeing Franco jailed for many years today will bring some measure of comfort to a family who continue to grieve for his loss.”


Tanzania president announces inquiry into protest deaths

Tanzania president announces inquiry into protest deaths
Updated 6 sec ago
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Tanzania president announces inquiry into protest deaths

Tanzania president announces inquiry into protest deaths
  • Allegations of rigging and government repression sparked days of violent protests in which hundreds were killed by security forces
  • Hassan said: “The government has taken the step of forming an inquiry commission to investigate what happened”

NAIROBI: Tanzanian President Samia Suluhu Hassan on Friday announced an inquiry into the killings that occurred during the election that returned her to power, and called for leniency for some protesters charged with treason.
Hassan retained the presidency with 98 percent of the vote on October 29, according to the electoral commission, after her main opponents were jailed or disqualified.
Allegations of rigging and government repression sparked days of violent protests in which hundreds were killed by security forces, according to the opposition and rights groups, amid a total Internet blackout.
“I am deeply saddened by the incident. I offer my condolences to all the families who lost their loved ones,” Hassan said at the opening session of the new parliament.
“The government has taken the step of forming an inquiry commission to investigate what happened,” she added.
It was the first conciliatory message toward the protesters since the unrest. The government has yet to provide any casualty figures.
Hundreds of protesters have been arrested and charged with treason, which carries the death penalty, but the president indicated there would be leniency as she tries to rebuild the traumatized nation.
“I realize that many youths who were arrested and charged with treason did not know what they were doing,” she said.
“As the mother of this nation, I direct the law enforcement agencies and especially the office of the director of police to look at the level of offenses committed by our youths.
“For those who seem to have followed the crowd and did not intend to commit a crime, let them erase their mistakes,” she said.

- Repression -

Hassan inherited the presidency on the sudden death of authoritarian president John Magufuli in 2021.
She faced strong opposition from within the party, but was feted for easing restrictions on the opposition and media.
That opening proved short-lived, however, as repression returned worse than ever in 2024.
Opposition and rights groups accuse the security forces of a campaign of kidnappings and murders targeting Hassan’s critics that ramped up in the weeks leading up to the election.
Some were high-profile, like former government spokesman and ambassador Humphrey Polepole, reported missing from his blood-stained home on October 6 after resigning in a letter that criticized Hassan’s government.
The violence has led to criticism from Western countries and the United Nations.
A cross-party pair of United States senators on the foreign relations committee issued a statement on Thursday that condemned the Tanzanian elections as “marred by state-sponsored political repression, targeted abductions and manipulation.”
They said a “heavy handed security response (to the protests) resulted in the death of hundreds and the abduction and imprisonment of many more” and called for a reassessment of US ties with Tanzania.
The Legal and Human Rights Center, a leading advocacy group in Tanzania, said Thursday that its team was harassed and intimidated by police while working at the White Sands Hotel in Dar es Salaam.
“The entire hotel was under siege, and our team was the sole target. Laptops and phones were seized,” the group said on X.