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A teenage Syrian refugee who fled the conflict-ridden city of Homs after sustaining injuries in a bombing met a tragic end in a West Yorkshire town center. A jury was informed by prosecutors that the young man was fatally stabbed by an assailant after ‘innocuously’ passing by the latter’s girlfriend.
Ahmad Al Ibrahim, aged 16, had only been residing in Huddersfield for a few weeks when he was brutally stabbed in the neck in broad daylight. Leeds Crown Court heard that the perpetrator was 20-year-old Alfie Franco.
The court was told that Ahmad, while walking with a friend through a bustling shopping area of Huddersfield town center on April 3, inadvertently brushed past Franco’s girlfriend, possibly making minor contact.
Prosecutor Richard Wright KC said Franco ‘appears to have taken some petty exception to that entirely innocuous passing’ and called Ahmad back.
According to Mr. Wright, while Ahmad began approaching, Franco had already started reaching into his jogging bottoms, unfolding a flick knife that he was unlawfully carrying.
‘He concealed the knife as he opened it, so that the boy did not appreciate the terrible danger he was in.’
The jury learned that Ahmad, who was unarmed, had not yet come close when Franco suddenly lunged and drove the concealed blade into Ahmad’s neck.
CCTV showed Ahmad clutching his throat and staggering a few yards up the street before collapsing.

Ahmad Mamdouh Al Ibrahim, 16, was knifed in the neck in Huddersfield on April 3
Mr. Wright recounted how Franco nonchalantly crossed the road, wiping Ahmad’s blood from the knife before stowing it back into his trousers and fleeing the scene.
Jurors heard the knife travelled about 6cm deep into Ahmad’s neck, causing ‘immediate and massive blood loss’ and causing him to choke to death.
He was pronounced dead shortly after arriving at hospital.
The court heard Ahmad had arrived in the UK as an unaccompanied child refugee and was originally housed in another part of the country before being moved to Huddersfield to be near a relative.
The teenager, who spoke English and was enrolled in college, had arranged to meet a friend at the bus station in Huddersfield on the day he died.
Franco was in the town centre that afternoon with his then girlfriend.
Mr Wright said the two pairs were ‘oblivious to one another and (had) no previous involvement with one another’.
Showing jurors CCTV footage of their movements around Huddersfield that day, Mr Wright said: ‘Unknown to one another, without any connection or pre-existing grievance, two young men wandering around the town centre unaware that within moments one of them would kill the other by stabbing him in the neck.’

Al Ibrahim was stabbed in Ramsden Street, Huddersfield, by a man whose girlfriend he ‘innocuously’ walked past, prosecutors told a jury on Thursday
The court heard Franco went home after fleeing the scene but later handed himself in to police, telling officers during an interview that Ahmad had bumped into his girlfriend and then asked him: ‘Do you have a problem?’
Franco said he replied: ‘Nah mate, do you have a problem?’ and was turning to leave but Ahmad walked towards him.
He told police he saw something that he thought was a weapon on Ahmad’s waist and so he took out an antique knife that belonged to his uncle who had recently died, and which he carried only for sentimental reasons.
Mr Wright said: ‘He described Ahmad as “launching” at him and claimed that he had “launched” back using his non-dominant left hand and not meaning to stab him where he stabbed him.’
Franco told police he had spent years living in South Africa as the only white boy in the Cape Flats, and said where he was from ‘if a boy came for you with aggression, they are either coming to hurt you or kill you’.
Mr Wright said the prosecution case was that ‘self-defence does not arise at all’, telling jurors: ‘Ahmad was not the aggressor, and he was not armed with a weapon.’
The prosecutor said the knife was not a keepsake that Franco had inherited from his dead uncle, but that he had bought it weeks earlier.
He told jurors Franco ‘had a wider interest in knives’, that he owned two more and had searched online for two others.

The teenager had only recently moved to the area from south Wales
The court heard Franco’s phone contained a video of him ‘playing with the knife that he had used to kill Ahmad, practicing opening the blade with his left hand’.
Jurors heard Franco had consumed cannabis before the killing, and tests also revealed he had recently used cocaine, diazepam, ketamine, and codeine.
After Ahmad’s death his family said he came to the UK, after being injured in a bombing, to live with his uncle and dreamed of becoming a doctor, ‘wanting to heal others after all he had endured’.
They said: ‘He chose to come to the UK because he believed in the values of human rights, safety, and dignity… He had just begun settling into his new life with his uncle, adjusting to a new language, a new home, and a future he was excited to build.
‘Ahmad was kind, gentle, and carried so much promise. Losing him has left an unimaginable emptiness in our hearts.
‘We never thought that the place he saw as a safe haven would be where his life would end.’
Franco denies murder but has admitted a charge of possessing a knife in a public place.
The trial continues.