CCTV moment Muslim worshippers doused in petrol and set on fire outside mosques in Birmingham & London

A jury in the trial of Mohammed Abbkr at Birmingham Crown Court have been shown footage of the moment two elderly Muslim worshippers were doused in petrol and set alight outside mosques in Birmingham and London
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CCTV shows the moment two elderly Muslim worshippers were doused in petrol and set on fire outside mosques in London and Birmingham.

Paranoid Schizophrenic Mohammed Abbkr, aged 29 and from Edgbaston in Birmingham, is on trial accused of attempting to murder Hashi Odowa, 82, in London, and Mohammed Rayaz, 70, in Birmingham, in separate attacks earlier this year.

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Abbkr allegedly targeted Mr Odowa when he failed to recognise him, telling him - "I swear in the name of Allah you will know me." He then sprayed petrol on Mr Rayaz and left him ‘engulfed in flames from head to foot’ because he did not speak Arabic, jurors were told.

Abbkr admits being the person responsible for setting both men alight but denies attempted murder and administering a destructive thing with intent to endanger life. CCTV played to the jury during the trial at Birmingham Crown Court has now been released by West Midlands Police.

Mohammed Abbkr, 29, is accused of trying to kill Mr Odowa and Mohammed Rayaz, 70Mohammed Abbkr, 29, is accused of trying to kill Mr Odowa and Mohammed Rayaz, 70
Mohammed Abbkr, 29, is accused of trying to kill Mr Odowa and Mohammed Rayaz, 70

It shows Abbkr arriving and praying at West London Islamic Centre, in Ealing, London ahead of the first incident on February 27. As he leaves the mosque a fireball can be seen in the distance as Mr Odowa was set alight, causing burns to his ears and hands.

Footage from the Birmingham attack also captures both parties praying at Dudley Road Mosque on March 20. Abbkr then follows the victim along the streets at the end of prayers and can be heard asking Mr Rayaz whether he speaks Arabic.

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When he says he speaks Urdu and Punjabi, Mr Rayaz can then be seen being sprayed with a liquid from a bottle before being engulfed in a ball of flames. In a police interview, Mr Odowa told how he thought he was going to die after being covered with a light coloured liquid and having a lighter held to his neck.

Mohammed RayazMohammed Rayaz
Mohammed Rayaz

He said: "The man said in Arabic ‘ I swear in the name of Allah in the name of God you will know me’. I felt like he wanted to threaten me. The man then got closer to me. I saw him shake the bottle. He was targeting my face and then he poured the petrol from top down. I put my hand up to my face.

"Then he lit the flame and it caught the left side of my face. I do not know what he used to start the fire with. I remember a big flame. I remember removing my jacket to get the flames off. My vest was on fire and I took it off."

Mr Rayaz described in his police interview being attacked as he left Dudley Road mosque, where he had been a regular for 15 years. He said: "I never saw him come up behind me or from the right or left He came in front of me and started to attack me. I tried to carry on.

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"He had something in his hand and I wondered whether it was a knife and he was going to attack me with a knife. He just quickly threw something on me. The flames have gone up. I did not know what to do. I just tried to pull off my clothing. I was screaming for help but nobody came."

Police outside Dudley Road Mosque in Birmingham on March 21, 2023, where a man was attending before he was set alightPolice outside Dudley Road Mosque in Birmingham on March 21, 2023, where a man was attending before he was set alight
Police outside Dudley Road Mosque in Birmingham on March 21, 2023, where a man was attending before he was set alight

Nicholas de la Poer KC, prosecuting, told the court: "It is the prosecution case that the defendant intended to kill Mr Odowa and Mr Rayaz when he attacked them. The defendant has denied this and on his behalf it is contended that he was suffering from delusions at the time and had not intended to kill a human being.

"Mr Rayaz survived the defendant’s attack but he was less fortunate than Mr Odowa. He suffered more serious burns, injuries particularly to his head. He was in hospital for a number of weeks following the attack. It is the prosecution case that when the defendant threw petrol on Mr Rayaz and set fire to him and then added further petrol to the flames, he was intending to kill him."

The court heard Abbkr came to the UK from Sudan in 2017 and was granted asylum in 2019. After his arrest, he was diagnosed as suffering from paranoid schizophrenia involving persecutory and religious delusions Abbkr denies the charges against him and the trial continues.