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The worrying details of four serious crimes carried out by illegal migrants in Britain that have emerged over just six days

The jailing of a failed asylum seeker for the random murder of a restaurant owner is the latest serious crime by an illegal immigrant to attract public attention in recent days.

An Afghan refugee was also today charged with a triple stabbing that left his dog walker dead in Uxbridge.

MPs and campaigners today described the cases as further evidence of the damage caused by the government’s failure to control Britain’s borders.

Safi Dawood, 22, is charged with one count of murder, two counts of attempted murder and possession of an offensive weapon.

A 45-year-old man and a 14-year-old boy were injured during the attack.

The verdict on the charge has not yet been announced, but it has shed further light on the victims of migrants who arrived in the UK on a small boat.

Haybe Cabdiraxmaan Nur, a 47-year-old Somali national who entered the UK illegally, stabbed Gurvinder Singh Johal, 37, at Lloyds Bank in Derby shortly after complaining about his asylum application being rejected.

Today’s sentencing to a minimum of 25 years in prison comes just days after Mr Broadhurst was killed in a triple stabbing on Monday and five years after alleged killer Dawood arrived in the UK in a lorry.

On Friday, Channel immigrant Deng Chol Majek was found guilty of the unprovoked murder of British mother Rhiannon Whyte, who worked at the mental hospital where she was staying.

Haybe Cabdiraxmaan Nur, 47, who came to England on a small boat, stabbed father of three Gurvinder Singh Johal (37) at Lloyds Bank in Derby.

Picture: Police officers at Midhurst Gardens in Uxbridge, west London, where a dog walker was killed

Picture: Police officers at Midhurst Gardens in Uxbridge, west London, where a dog walker was killed

On the same day, Epping migrant hotel sex attacker Hadush Kebatu was mistakenly released from HMP Chelmsford just four weeks after being sentenced to prison for sexually assaulting a 14-year-old girl and a woman.

While he was finally deported on Tuesday night, another asylum seeker, Shafiullah Rasooli, 29, is awaiting sentencing for sexually assaulting two women while delivering takeaways to their home in Maidstone, Kent.

Robert Bates, Director of Research at the Immigration Control Centre, told the Mail: ‘Each of these tragic events that we now see almost every day are the direct result of decisions made by weak politicians who were unprepared for radical action.

‘We must urgently switch to a policy of detention and deportation and eliminate the ability of those who enter our country to seek asylum.’

Nur, who carried out the stabbing at Lloyds Bank, was known to police in France, Luxembourg, Italy and Germany over the years and had been arrested for various crimes before coming to the UK.

Prosecutors told Derby Crown Court he arrived in the UK on a small boat on October 22, 2024, but was told four days later that there were no reasonable grounds to apply for asylum because he was not a victim of trafficking.

Wayne Broadhurst (pictured) died during a triple stabbing in Midhurst Gardens, Uxbridge. Case filed against Afghan national who arrived in the UK in a truck five years ago

Wayne Broadhurst (pictured) died during a triple stabbing in Midhurst Gardens, Uxbridge. Case filed against Afghan national who arrived in the UK in a truck five years ago

His asylum application was formally rejected in January, and by March he was served with an immigration bail notice requiring him not to work.

Shocking CCTV showed Nur walking into Lloyds on St Peter’s Street in Derby on May 6, then approaching Mr Johal, stabbing him in the chest and walking out.

Less than two hours before the murder, he made an appeal to the charity Immigration Aid, saying he would ‘kill 500 people’ and claimed that he would target ‘doctors, police or people working in the Home Office’.

There was another unprovoked murder on Monday; Mr Broadhurst, 49, was stabbed to death while walking his dog in Uxbridge, west London, at around 5pm. Two more people were injured before the suspect was tasered by police.

While one teenager was discharged, a man remained in hospital with life-changing injuries.

Dawood, who was arrested at the scene, did not know Mr Broadhurst but knew his other two victims.

Home Office officials confirmed the suspect arrived in the UK illegally in 2020 and was granted permission to remain nearly two years later.

The incident is not being treated as terrorism but Metropolitan Police detectives are working to establish whether there is any relationship between the suspect and the three victims.

Three days ago, Sudanese Deng Chol Majek was found guilty of murder at Wolverhampton Crown Court.

Majek, who claimed to be 19 but had no papers, stabbed Rhiannon Whyte, who is believed to have entered the UK illegally on a small boat, 23 times with a screwdriver while she was on the phone to her best friend.

The attack on the railway station platform took place after the 27-year-old mother finished her night shift and made the 90-second walk from the Park Inn Hotel in Walsall to the town’s Bescot Stadium station on October 20 last year.

The Mail revealed that Sudanese Majek arrived in the UK on a small boat on the same day as the Southport attack, which triggered anti-immigrant riots across the country, including in migrant hotels, in July last year.

It was also revealed that the asylum seekers had previously made bomb threats and harassed young women working at the hotel. Police were unable to establish any motive for his ‘vicious and frenzied attack’ on Ms Whyte.

Home Affairs Minister Shabana Mahmood yesterday praised the successful deportation of Epping attacker Hadush Kebatu as evidence that ‘If you come to this country and commit a crime, we will remove you’.

But it later emerged that Kebatu, who was mistakenly released from HMP Chelmsford on Friday and captured following a manhunt, was paid £500 to leave after threatening to ‘disrupt’ the transport flight.

Although he was told at his first hearing that he had a ‘firm desire’ to return to Ethiopia, his compliance with immigration officials appears to have deteriorated.

He threatened to launch a legal challenge against his deportation and even said he was considering making a new asylum claim with the Home Office.

Deng Chol Majek, who was from Sudan but arrived in the UK on a small boat in July last year, was found guilty of murdering mother-of-one Rhiannon Whyte in October 2024.

Deng Chol Majek, who was from Sudan but arrived in the UK on a small boat in July last year, was found guilty of murdering mother-of-one Rhiannon Whyte in October 2024.

Sex attacker Hadush Kebatu at Epping immigration hotel

Kebatu was seen on the plane heading to Ethiopia

Epping immigration hotel sex attacker Hadush Kebatu (left) was finally deported on Tuesday night (right)

Stating that he would leave quietly in exchange for cash, Kebatu was forcibly deported from England by a team of five security guards.

Kebatu was supposed to be transferred to a deportation center last week, but unsuspecting prison officers repeatedly told him to leave and take a train to London instead.

A source said the decision to pay £500 to the sex offender was designed to save the taxpayer wider costs, including detention, new flight tickets and legal fees if he lodged a legal challenge against his dismissal.

They suggested the alternative might be ‘slower and more expensive’.

The source added that ministers were not involved in the decision to pay the sum and that the Home Office’s transfer teams were responsible for allocating the funds.

Shafiullah Rasooli, 29, who was working illegally as a delivery driver, touched the breasts of two female customers. He will be sentenced to prison for three separate crimes on July 26 and July 3. Two of the sexual assaults were against the same victim.

The Afghan had overstayed his stay in the UK when he carried out the attacks.

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