logo
‘Killer' accused of murdering beauty queen ‘fled to UK on small boat' as heartbroken dad fears he'll never get justice

‘Killer' accused of murdering beauty queen ‘fled to UK on small boat' as heartbroken dad fears he'll never get justice

Scottish Sun2 days ago
BOAT HORROR 'Killer' accused of murdering beauty queen 'fled to UK on small boat' as heartbroken dad fears he'll never get justice
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window)
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
A MAN accused of murdering his beauty queen wife fled to the UK on a small boat, it is claimed.
Ibrahim Ghazal, from Lebanon, is alleged to have suffocated Zeina Kanjo to death in Beirut before moving around Europe for years.
Sign up for Scottish Sun
newsletter
Sign up
4
Ibrahim Ghazal is accused of murdering his wife Zeina Kanjo
Credit: Instagram
4
Zeina was suffocated to death just months after she got married
Credit: Instagram
4
The year before her death, she had represented her country in a beauty pageant in Egypt
Credit: Instagram
The 36-year-old - who is subject to an Interpol red notice - eventually travelled to Britain from France this year along with thousands of other migrants.
Ghazal was jailed last week jailed for nine months for attempting to arrive without valid entry clearance after being arrested by Border Force.
Government officials are facing a possible crisis ahead of his sentence expiring.
Ms Kanjo's dad Mohammed fears his daughter will never get justice if the alleged killer returns to Lebanon and is hopeful the British legal system can step up.
READ MORE NEWS
MIGRANT 'SPIT ATTACK' Homeless migrant who came to UK on dinghy denies spitting at cop
Ghazal was protected from extradition from Germany and Sweden under Human Rights laws by claiming he faced execution in his homeland, reports MailOnline.
There are fears Ghazal could do the same to remain in Britain.
Ms Kanjo, 33, was murdered in January 2021, having apparently got married just four months earlier.
Her death sparked a national debate in Lebanon about domestic abuse.
Ms Kanjo had filed domestic violence and fraud cases against her new husband and was trying to divorce him when she was killed, according to reports.
She had represented her country at a beauty contest in Egypt the previous year.
16 arrested after protests outside Epping migrant hotel as ring of steel ramps up around TWO asylum seeker centres
Ghazal allegedly fled to Turkey hours after his wife's death.
Lebanese channel Al Jadeed broadcast an audio recording in which he allegedly admitted to the murder.
Speaking to Ms Kanjo's sister, the person says: "I didn't want to, I didn't want her to die, when she was screaming, I just put my hand on her mouth."
Ghazal is understood to have travelled through Greece, the Netherlands and Luxembourg.
He was arrested in December 2022 in Stokholm under Interpol's red notice.
However, Swedish laws prevented him from being extradited back home where he said he faced execution, and when he was detained again in Germany, the same thing happened, according to Ms Kanjo's lawyer Ashraf Al-Moussawi.
Mr Al-Moussawi has pointed out Lebanon has not carried out an execution since 1994 and so this should not have been used as a defence.
He added the alleged killer then "wandered Europe until his recent arrest in England".
The lawyer has urged the British government to find a way to send Ghazal back to his homeland to face justice.
Ms Kanjo's dad Mohammed claims his daughter's husband had sneaked back into Lebanon to attend his cousin's wedding a year after his wife's death.
"After all this time, I'm left wondering if justice will ever be served," he told the Mail.
"It's like something is missing from your body, something that is not replaceable.
"I honestly hope he's not handed over to Lebanese authorities only to be imprisoned and then released again."
He added perhaps the UK legal system can "find a way to properly punish him".
Ghazal was detained by Border Force and jailed at Gloucester Crown Court last Wednesday after admitting to entering the country unlawfully.
A Government spokesman said: "The Home Office never comments on whether extradition requests have or have not been received, and it is also our longstanding policy not to comment on individual cases.
"However, we will always do everything in our power to remove serious foreign criminals from the UK so they are not left free on our streets after completing their sentence."
The Sun has approached the Home Office for further comment.
Do you know more? Email ryan.merrifield@thesun.co.uk
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The ballad of broken Britain
The ballad of broken Britain

Spectator

time33 minutes ago

  • Spectator

The ballad of broken Britain

In my corner of Bristol, alongside drug dealers, shoplifters and street drinkers, we now have our very own pyromaniac. They started small – an abandoned office chair, a clothing bank and an old telephone box – before moving on to bigger things. Half a dozen cars have been torched over the past few months, including two on my road, and, most recently, a derelict pub. The other Saturday, hearing a commotion outside, my wife jumped out of bed and flung open the curtains. The scene that greeted us was apocalyptic. In daylight, on a narrow suburban street, the arsonist had set fire to three motorbikes parked in a row, which in turn had set alight a car and a hedge. It was pandemonium. People were wandering around in their nightclothes, some barefoot, having been advised by the police to leave their homes. The bikes and car were engulfed in flames, and thick clouds of black smoke billowed over the houses. The fire brigade arrived quickly and soon had things under control, but the resulting carnage was like West Belfast circa the 1970s after a mortar attack. Setting vehicles alight is a serious criminal offence, not to mention incredibly dangerous, yet the police response was sluggish. For weeks, charred motorbike frames and the blackened shells of cars sat on melted tarmac. Wandering the area felt like disaster tourism. Eventually, after mounting complaints, a meeting was called with councillors and police in attendance. However, what was meant to be a discussion about the fires quickly turned into a free-for-all on rising crime. It was a comically British affair – lots of blustering and cries of: 'Do speak up, we can't hear you at the back!' There also seemed to be a few budding local sleuths who'd uncovered some quite extraordinary goings-on that the police were unaware of. Notwithstanding our resident Miss Marples, if we'd gone looking for reassurance, we didn't get any. Although we were told we could report incidents online and expect a response within 72 hours. Amazing. You'd hope the issue would be resolved by then. Still, there were tea and biscuits – so that was all right. In effect, the mostly middle-class crowd came away with the impression that it was down to them to manage the situation: 'You can apply for a council grant to install CCTV at your house, or buy one of those camera doorbell thingies.' The police, it seems, don't have the time or resources. One thing we were promised was increased patrols, but our local 'cop shop' is only open a few hours a week, and I don't think I've seen a policeman on foot in the 20-odd years I've been here. You do see the occasional PCSO, but they engender about as much confidence as a Boy Scout left in charge of an anti-aircraft battery. Thankfully, I recently escaped to Menorca for a week. There's very little crime, no graffiti, no litter, and the sea – a major draw – is crystal clear. The overall impression is of a laid-back, prosperous, well-run place that the inhabitants are proud of. Coming back to the UK was a kick in the Balearics due to the stark contrast. It felt like returning home to find the front door bashed in, the house ransacked and someone cooking crystal meth on the stove. Within hours, we'd seen drug deals, masked youths speeding about on electric motorbikes and drunks stumbling in the road. The usual dope smoke, graffiti tagging and filthy streets completed the picture. If we lived in a more affluent part of Bristol, or some rural idyll, perhaps the return wouldn't have hit quite so hard. But I still wouldn't have been able to escape the headlines: water company bosses pocketing millions while pumping effluent into rivers and seas; polls suggesting almost half of the public think Britain is becoming lawless; a justice system in crisis; dire public finances; a government desperate to avoid another summer of rioting. The sense – to borrow one of the Prime Minister's favourite phrases – is of a country in managed decline. Except the decline isn't being managed very well. Yes, Menorca is small and sparsely populated – easier to keep pristine. And yes, coming home from holiday is always a downer. However, the overwhelming impression was of returning to a country that had lost its way. A 16-year-old boy was recently arrested in connection with the pub fire. Dozens of cars have since had their tyres slashed, and someone took a machete to a row of saplings – so, irrespective of whether or not he's the arsonist, we're not out of the woods yet. Although, thanks to the idiot with the machete, there won't now be a wood – or even a copse. In Richard II, John of Gaunt laments: 'That England, that was wont to conquer others, Hath made a shameful conquest of itself.' Hasn't it just? And, as Abraham Lincoln observed: 'A house divided against itself cannot stand.' So, while tea and biscuits may long have been a social lubricant in Britain, there are times when cohesion is so frayed, we need more than that – and I'm afraid this is one of them. To be honest, though, you'd probably get bored with Menorca after a while. All that sand – it's a bastard to get out of your shoes.

Notorious Scots coke cartel hood ‘The Captain' has house and cars torched by maniac rivals
Notorious Scots coke cartel hood ‘The Captain' has house and cars torched by maniac rivals

Scottish Sun

time6 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

Notorious Scots coke cartel hood ‘The Captain' has house and cars torched by maniac rivals

Cops are understood to have issued him with an Osman 'threat to life' warning following the attack MOB BOSS CRONY TARGETED Notorious Scots coke cartel hood 'The Captain' has house and cars torched by maniac rivals Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A COCAINE kingpin's house was firebombed after he was let home from jail to visit family, we can reveal. Paul 'The Captain' Fleming, 40, had his front door and two cars parked outside torched less than 12 hours after he was freed from Castle Huntly open nick on leave. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 6 Cocaine trafficker Paul 'The Captain' Fleming was targeted 6 Sources claimed culprits were acting under orders of caged hitman Barry Harvey 6 It happened less than 12 hours after he was freed from Castle Huntly nick on leave Cops are understood to have issued him with an Osman 'threat to life' warning after visiting him in prison near Dundee following the chilling attack. Sources claimed the culprits were acting under the orders of caged hitman Barry Harvey, 37, when they targeted the pad in Bishopbriggs, near Glasgow. The feared gun thug is said to have had a bust-up with Fleming — jailed for almost ten years for smuggling coke into the UK in solar panels alongside Scots cartel boss James 'The Don' White. An insider said last night: 'Fleming was only home half a day when four guys burned two of his cars and his house. 'Harvey has a personal gripe with Fleming and he's said to be behind it. 'Everybody knows Harvey is a dangerous guy and even though he's inside he still has the connections and power to go after his enemies.' None of the guys in Castle Huntly can stand Fleming. Police have been up to serve him an Osman warning. He's in real danger Our source It is believed married dad-of-four Fleming was due to be home for a week but had his leave cancelled after the attack just after 1am on July 17. Harvey was jailed for at least 29 years in March last year for shooting dead gym boss Gary More, 32, in Airdrie in 2018. He was part of a crew also nailed for murdering Rafal Lyko, 36, in Blantyre, plus a bid to kill Scott Bennett, 43, in Rutherglen, near Glasgow. Our source added: 'None of the guys in Castle Huntly can stand Fleming. Drug dealer son of iconic 1990s band's lead singer who was snared by cops after finding messages about his dad is jailed "Police have been up to serve him an Osman warning. He's in real danger.' We told how Fleming and White made millions through the coke in solar panels racket. They were snared when cops cracked the secret EncroChat phones used by mobs to direct operations. Everybody knows Harvey is a dangerous guy and even though he's inside he still has the connections and power to go after his enemies An insider Fleming fled to Alicante, Spain, in 2019 but was extradited back to Britain to face justice two years ago. He was ordered to pay back just £126,000 during a proceeds of crime hearing in February — despite amassing at least £2million from the plot. White got almost a decade in jail in 2023 for masterminding the global operation. Police said: 'We were called to a report of a wilful vehicle fire in Bishopbriggs. Enquiries continue.' The Scottish Prison Service said: 'We do not comment on individuals.' 6 Fleming was the right-hand man to cartel boss James 'The Don' White Credit: PA 6 It happened less than 12 hours after he was freed from Castle Huntly nick on leave

Investigators quiz jailed Ghislaine Maxwell about Prince Andrew, claim reports
Investigators quiz jailed Ghislaine Maxwell about Prince Andrew, claim reports

Scottish Sun

time6 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

Investigators quiz jailed Ghislaine Maxwell about Prince Andrew, claim reports

US Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche asked her about more than 100 people linked to her paedophile ex-boyfriend Jeffrey Epstein Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) INVESTIGATORS quizzed jailed madam Ghislaine Maxwell about Prince Andrew, it is reported. She answered 'honestly and truthfully' during nine hours of questions. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 3 A source, quoted by The Mail on Sunday, said: 'She was asked about a list of people including Prince Andrew' Credit: Getty 3 Andrew with Virginia Roberts, 17, and Ghislaine Maxwell at her London townhouse Credit: AFP US Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche asked her about more than 100 people linked to her paedophile ex-boyfriend Jeffrey Epstein. Brit socialite Maxwell, 63, is serving 20 years in Florida after being convicted of offences including sex trafficking. The meeting came after President Donald Trump faced questions over his own links to Epstein, who killed himself in jail awaiting trial in 2019. A source, quoted by The Mail on Sunday, said: 'Ghislaine has never told her story to anyone in government before. 'At times it was very emotional but she answered every question asked of her. 'She was asked about a list of people including Prince Andrew, Bill Gates, Bill Clinton, Alan Dershowitz and powerful Wall Street financiers. 'It's ironic that Elon Musk kicked this whole thing off when he fell out with Trump and then made that post on X about Trump allegedly preventing the release of the full Epstein documents as some sort of 'cover-up'. 'Well, Elon is in there, as is his brother. "It was a monumental moment for Ghislaine to finally be asked about these people and to tell the truth.' Jeffrey Epstein's brother insists he was 'most likely murdered' amid mystery around 'missing minute' of 'suicide' video

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store