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Deux étudiantes Algériennes Assassinées En Angleterre

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  • Deux étudiantes Algériennes Assassinées En Angleterre

    DEUX ÉTUDIANTES ALGÉRIENNES ASSASSINÉES EN ANGLETERRE
    Le criminel court toujours


    Coïncidence ou mimétisme, ce double crime n’est pas sans évoquer la dernière vague d’assassinats dont ont été victimes des étudiants étrangers.
    Deux étudiantes algériennes, Yasmine, 22 ans, et sa soeur Sabrina L.C., 19 ans, ont été retrouvées mortes, dimanche après-midi, dans leur appartement situé Ryand Street à Birmingham en Angleterre. Selon les premières déclarations de la police, les victimes auraient été poignardées à plusieurs reprises «il y avait une importante quantité de sang dans l’appartement».


    Les conditions de ce double meurtre ne sont pas encore connues avec exactitude. L’enquête se poursuit toujours. Selon les premières indiscrétions, la thèse d’un crime passionnel n’est pas à écarter.
    En effet, selon des témoignages de voisins des deux victimes, rapportés hier par la presse britannique, Yasmine aurait fait l’objet, à plusieurs reprises, de menaces de la part de son «ex-petit ami» éconduit.
    En effet plusieurs témoignages confortent cette thèse. Yasmine a déjà fait l’objet d’une agression similaire alors qu’elle habitait dans le Moseley.
    Un voisin, ayant tenu à garder l’anonymat, a affirmé à la police que «Yasmine s’est installée dans le Ladywood à Birmingham pour fuir son petit ami qui l’avait agressée auparavant». Et d’ajouter: «Cependant Yasmine s’est abstenue de déposer plainte pour ne pas lui donner l’occasion de découvrir sa nouvelle adresse. Je pense qu’elle avait peur de son petit ami et qu’elle ne voulait pas qu’il sache où elle vivait.»


    La police de West Midlands n’a pas voulu faire le moindre commentaire sur ces allégations. Aujourd’hui, les soupçons pèsent aujourd’hui sur un homme de 28 ans arrêté à Douvres alors qu’il tentait de fuir l’Angleterre à bord d’un ferry.
    Le mis en cause est toujours en garde à vue. Les deux victimes sont les filles d’un haut cadre de Sonatrach exerçant à Londres. Etudiante en biochimie, Yasmine dirigeait des cours de danse à Birmingham, tandis que Sabrina allait entrer à l’université.


    Les gens du quartier sont toujours sous le choc. Ils n’arrivent pas à expliquer un crime aussi odieux. Les deux victimes étaient très appréciées par leur entourage. Coïncidence ou mimétisme, ce double crime n’est pas sans évoquer le récent meurtre d’étudiants chinois en août dernier, après celui des Français assassinés en juillet.


    Leurs corps ont été découverts alors que les voisins avaient appelé les pompiers pour un incendie soi-disant lié à une explosion.
    Les deux étudiants ont été tués de sang froid à coups de couteau portés dans le dos, la tête et le cou, après avoir été ligotés.
    Les agresseurs ont par la suite brûlé l’appartement pour brouiller les pistes. Ces exemples tendent à confirmer la recrudescence d’une certaine xénophobie.

    L'EXPRESSION

  • #2
    Allah Yarhamhoum.

    Pour ce qui est de l'article, le journaliste n'est pas très cohérent....Il consacre un paragraphe à expliquer qu'il s'agit probablement d'un crime passionnel et il conclut en qualifiant le crime de raciste...

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    • #3
      les 2 filles tuees par un ami

      http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...arty-flat.html

      Police 'were told of attack by ex-lover before sisters found hacked to pieces at luxury party flat'
      By Andy Dolan and Colin Fernandez
      Last updated at 6:45 PM on 18th September 2008


      Add to My Stories

      A woman hacked to death with her younger sister in a luxury city centre flat had been living in fear of a violent ex-boyfriend, it emerged today.


      Yasmine Larbi-Cherif, 22, and her sister Sabrina, 19, were slaughtered in a scene resembling a 'bloodbath' after a frenzied attack.


      As their mother Halima, 54, spoke of her grief at the loss of her 'angels', friends revealed how Yasmine had reported a series of physical assaults at the hands of the former lover to police.


      Sisters: Yasmine, left, and Sabrina Larbi-Cherif were brutally killed in their luxury flat in Birmingham

      Yasmine had studied a one-year foundation course in chemistry at Birmingham University before leaving her studies to work as a dance teacher, while her sister had just moved to the city from their family home in London to start a French degree.


      Their mutliated bodies were found by a concierge in the newly-built Jupiter Apartments development in Birmingham - alerted by their family who were worried they were not answering the phone.


      Neighbours at the apartment block - which is also home to Big Brother 3 winner and local radio DJ Kate Lawler - reported hearing violent rows between a man and a woman in the fourth floor £240,000 flat in the days before the women's death.


      And a former neighbour of Yasmine at a previous home two miles away in Moseley, Birmingham, told how she had been beaten up by a lover.


      He said:'The boyfriend used to hit her a lot and had attacked her before.


      'When the police heard she had moved out of this place, they came round and asked us questions because they were worried about her.



      More...
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      'This was about four or five months ago just after she moved out.'


      The 29-year-old man, also of North African descent, who only gave his name as Yujeeb, added: 'I know she had pressed charges against her boyfriend but she did not give the police her new address when she went to live with her sister.


      'I think she was afraid of her boyfriend and she didn't want him to know where she was living.'


      Kris Nero, 29, another neighbour said: 'Her boyfriend had a white Mazda which had a smashed window, which he had repaired with tape.


      'I last saw her at the weekend, but before that he has been trying to get into these flats when she wasn't in and was being quite agressive about it.


      Neighbours described Yasmine and Sabrina as 'very decent people'





      'We heard him knock on the door a couple of times and he rang the doorbell for every flat in the building trying to get in. He was an Asian guy in his mid 20's.'


      Yasmine had also worked as a sales rep for medical equipment until July this year.


      Yasmine, 22, was a student at Birmingham University

      In a statement, the family of the murdered girls, who came to Britain from Algeria ten years ago said the girls had only moved into the apartment a few weeks earlier and had phoned their family every day.


      They said: 'With amazing skills and tremendous determination, Yasmine and Sabrina excelled at everything they were involved with socially and educationally.'


      'Due to their Islamic faith they were always humble, compassionate, generous and helpful to anyone who knew them.


      'Headmasters, teachers, lecturers, friends and neighbours alike are living testimony of their pure human goodness.'


      Mrs Larbi-Cherif said her daughters had been raised in a 'warm and loving family' and had hoped that in England their children would achieve 'a high-level education and secure a prosperous future'.


      Yasmine - who spoke four languages, French, Arabic, English and her native Berber had hoped eventually to work in medical research.


      Mrs Larbi-Cherif, of Wembley and her 59-year-old husband, who lives in Algeria said: 'Yasmine was extremely proud of her sister and delighted that she was joining her.


      'She was looking forward to showing her around Birmingham and settling her into her new life at university.


      Crime scene: A police officer guards Jupiter Apartments in central Birmingham where the bodies of the two sisters were discovered by the concierge

      'It was the happiest day of Sabrina's life when she achieved her grades to be able to go to Birmingham and join her sister.'


      The family said: 'Both their mother and father were extremely proud of the way in which the girls lived their lives, working and studying hard, as they had been brought up to do.'


      Meanwhile a group on the website Facebook called 'R.I.P. Yasmine and Sabrina Larbi-Cherif' attracted scores of moving tributes.


      Alison Shaw wrote: 'Can't believe it. I didn't know Sabrina, but Yasmine was a fellow Belly Dance teacher and I can honestly say I have never met a sweeter more genuine person.


      'Always smiling and laughing, a very beautiful person both inside and out. Anyone who ever saw Yasmine dance will never forget what they saw and the amazing raw talent that she had.


      'I'm sure that Sabrina was just as lovely as her sister and I can't even begin to imagine what their family is going through right now. There are no words to describe what her mother be be feeling.'


      Stephanie Pasiewicz wrote that Yasmine was nicknamed Smiles and 'lit up' the room.


      She added: 'To think that we were wanting to meet up on Sunday and Monday. All those unanswered phone calls.'


      Sabrina's entry on MySpace lists her heroes as her mother and Yasmine, 'my older and only sister who has helped me see the world from a different perspective'.


      A 28-year-old man arrested on suspicion of the double murder as he tried to board a ferry to Calais on Monday is still being questioned by detectives.


      Police have refused to confirm or deny whether the 28-year-old was romantically involved with Yasmine.


      Police have until 11pm tomorrow to question the suspect before they have to either charge or release him.


      They refused to comment on reports that Yasmine had contacted the police about being physically attacked.
      De l'algérie je suis nostalgique

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