Scottish Daily Mail

‘I’m going to die’ tweeted crazed killer of British backpacker

- By James Tozer

THE man who killed a British backpacker predicted his own death moments before his Outback hostel rampage.

Smail Ayad, 29, posted online that he was the victim of an internatio­nal plot and was ‘going to die’.

He then screamed Allahu Akbar – God is great – while frenziedly stabbing 20-year-old Mia Ayliffe-Chung in front of terrified fellow travellers.

The kickboxing champion had become entranced with the young Briton who was doing a three-month stint on a farm. Police are examining suggestion­s that he was obsessed with model and TV star Arianny Celeste, who bears a startling resemblanc­e to his victim. They have ruled out terrorism. Ayad is said to have told other guests at the Queensland hostel where they were staying that he and Miss Ayliffe-Chung were ‘deeply in love’.

The Frenchman apparently became outraged when he discovered she had posed for nearly nude photograph­s and did not return his affections.

After the attack, Ayad jumped off a second-floor balcony, covered in blood.

He lashed out at police officers and had to be wrestled to the ground and handcuffed. He then bit a detective in the leg in the police van on the way to the station and had to be subdued using pepper spray and a Taser. Twelve officers are said to have been injured.

After being charged with murder, two counts of attempted murder and 12 counts of serious assault, he was due to make a court appearance today by videolink from custody.

Moments before the attack, Ayad posted on Facebook: ‘I am the victim of an internatio­nal economic plot. I think that I am going to die. Those who love me, follow me. I love you all.’

John Norris, owner of Shelley’s Backpacker­s, where the attack took place, said Ayad had become deeply entranced and infatuated with Miss Ayliffe-Chung since her arrival at the remote hostel last week, following her around.

He said Ayad’s behaviour had changed on the day of the frenzied attack, adding: ‘He said something about his mother over in France, that he may have to go home and look after her.’

The hostel’s manager, Grant

‘The last person I expected’

Scholz, 46, who was also stabbed in the rampage and has more than 100 stitches, said he had nicknamed Ayad ‘Smiley’.

‘He’s the last person I expected to do anything like that,’ he told Australian television. Miss Ayliffe-- Chung’s parents were understood to be making arrangemen­ts yesterday to fly out to Australia and bring her body home.

After completing a childcare course at college she had left her home in Cromford, Derbyshire, last summer to go backpackin­g, following in the footsteps of her teacher mother Rosie, 53, a guidebook author.

She arrived in Australia earlier this year and settled in Surfers Paradise on the Gold Coast, working as a waitress at a raunchy nightclub called The Bedroom.

But she had to travel 800 miles north to work on a farm for three months to extend her visa and had moved to the remote town of Home Hill. Miss Ayliffe-Chung had told her mother she was having ‘the time of her life’ during a phone call home just hours before she died.

Shortly before midnight on Tuesday, police were called to the hostel as residents reported hearing screaming.

They found Ayad covered in blood and brandishin­g a knife. His victim had suffered multiple stab wounds to her face and body after being dragged from her bunk bed.

A second British backpacker, Thomas Jackson, who is a 30year-old charity worker from Congleton in Cheshire, had also been stabbed repeatedly.

 ??  ?? Victim: Mia Ayliffe-Chung was staying in the same hostel as her alleged killer, Smail Ayad
Victim: Mia Ayliffe-Chung was staying in the same hostel as her alleged killer, Smail Ayad

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