islam the religion of love, love to rape, love to rape little children, love to kill
SWEDEN
Egyptian family feud in Sollentuna: Maikel and Sajjad halal slaughtered relatives
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A conflict between relatives who immigrated to Sweden from Egypt ended in brutal blood revenge. The victim was severely beaten with, among other things, kicks to the head and threatened with a gun before finally having his throat cut and bleeding to death. One of the perpetrators was staying illegally in Sweden and would have been deported already in 2018.
On Friday, the Svea Court of Appeal upheld the life sentences against 25-year-old Maikel Rashed - the victim's cousin - and his crony, 24-year-old Sajjad Al-Kashwan , for murder. The crime was committed in an apartment in Sollentuna north of Stockholm on September 19 last year.
Maikel is deported for life, while Sajjad, who despite previous repeated serious crimes was granted Swedish citizenship, is allowed to stay. He appears in the criminal register with convictions for, among other things, money laundering and drug offences.
Two more people were charged – one is convicted
A third man, 19-year-old Tapha Saine, who was in the home at the time of the crime, is acquitted due to lack of sufficient evidence for the murder itself, but is convicted of complicity in the aggravated assault, the aggravated unlawful threat and unlawful deprivation of liberty that preceded the murder. The penalty is imprisonment for 2 years and 10 months (1 year and 11 months after deduction of penalty discount).
A 62-year-old Egyptian citizen was simultaneously charged with aggravated protection of a criminal related to the murder. The prosecutor had also demanded that the man be deported from Sweden. However, the court acquits the man due to lack of sufficient evidence, and thus the request for deportation is also rejected.
Blood feud and family feud
The motive for the murder is believed to be blood revenge within the framework of a family feud in Egypt that was brought with them when they immigrated to Sweden. The murdered relative, a man in his 30s, had been granted Swedish citizenship less than a week before the murder.
At the time of the murder, Maikel was not unknown to the Swedish justice system. He has previously been convicted of, among other things, drug offences, attempted robbery and illegal persecution. After the murder, he fled to Germany and sought asylum there with lies that he had been attacked and threatened by members of a criminal network. The German authorities saw through it and sent him back to Sweden.
Stayed illegally in Sweden
It then turned out that Maikel was living illegally in Sweden in and would have been deported as early as May 2018. Due to appeals, it took until 2022 before the decision became legally binding.
The reasons for asylum he then invoked bear great similarities to the murder he has now committed and been convicted of. Maikel claimed that it was impossible for him to return to Egypt because of a feud between his family and another family that resulted in a man being stabbed to death.