Judge asks for killer to be hanged on LIVE TV in Egypt

Judge asks for killer who stabbed a student to death for rejecting his marriage proposal to be hanged on LIVE TV in Egypt

  • Mohamed Adel, 21, was found guilty of murdering his university classmate Naira Ashraf when she rejected his marriage proposal outside Mansoura University
  • He stabbed her several times, on her neck and chest, in the Egyptian city
  • The court that sentenced Adel to death has requested to change the law around capital punishment so that the execution of the killer can be aired live

An Egyptian court is planning to broadcast the live hanging of a killer who stabbed a student to death when she turned down his marriage proposal outside Mansoura University.

Mohamed Adel, 21, was found guilty of murdering his university classmate Naira Ashraf when she turned him down, with the court sentencing him to death on July 6.

The court has now called for his execution to be broadcast live to deter similar crimes from happening in future.

In its letter to Parliament, the court wrote: ‘The broadcast, even if only part of the start of proceedings, could achieve the goal of deterrence, which was not achieved by broadcasting the sentencing itself.’

Chilling footage shows Adel attacking Ashraf outside Mansoura University near the Nile Delta on 20th June.

She was just about to sit her final exams, according to local media.


Chilling footage shows Adel attacking Ashraf outside Mansoura University near the Nile Delta on 20th June. She was just about to sit her final exams, according to local media

Ashraf died on the spot as angry passersby seized Adel while he was holding the knife and standing over her body, the video shows.

She was stabbed several times, including on her neck and chest, local media said.

The knifeman had stalked the student and had resolved to kill her after she rejected his marriage proposal, the court heard.

Mansoura Courthouse preliminarily settled on the death penalty on June 28, confirming the sentence a week later.

An appeal stalled the verdict, which was made public on July 24. Now, the court has requested that the legislature change the statute governing capital punishment so that the execution might be aired live.

‘We still have 60 days to challenge death sentence against Adel,’ said the defendant’s lawyer Farid El-Deeb.

El-Deeb, who worked as the lead defence lawyer for late ex-president Hosni Mubarak, is well-known in Egypt.

The last time a capital punishment was in 1998, when state television broadcast the execution of three men who had killed a woman and her two children at their home in Cairo.

In Egypt, the method of execution for civilian convictions is hanging.

Ashraf was stabbed several times, including on her neck and chest, local media said

The incident triggered an uproar on social media in Egypt, calling for authorities to step in  to rein in violence against women

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