South Wales Echo

CHEF GUILTY OF KILLING HIS BOSS

CARDIFF MURDERER STARTS LIFE SENTENCE AS HE IS BROUGHT TO JUSTICE 39 YEARS AFTER BRUTAL KNIFE ATTACK ON RESTAURANT OWNER

- LUCINDA CAMERON Press Associatio­n echo.newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

A CARDIFF chef has been jailed for life for murdering a restaurant owner with a filleting knife almost 40 years ago.

Riasat Khan stabbed 41-year-old Kazi Ahmad seven times on the neck and chest at a flat in Aberdeen on October 13, 1978.

He then fled the country for Pakistan, returning to the UK in the mid 1980s.

He had been living openly at an address in South Wales for the past five years.

But Khan, now 63, was arrested on a warrant as he tried to board a flight at Birmingham airport in May last year.

Lord Beckett ordered him to serve at least 16 years as he sentenced him at the High Court in Glasgow yesterday.

The judge said: “Justice has been delayed but justice has not been denied.

“The excellent work done by police officers, forensic scientists and pathologis­ts in 1978 stood the test of time leading to your conviction for murder in 2017.

“Had you been arrested in 1978 you would no doubt have been convicted of murder with the sentence of life imprisonme­nt and may well have been released by now.

“Instead your actions have allowed you to spend the best years of your adult life in freedom.”

Khan, from Clare Gardens, Cardiff, was convicted following a trial at the High Court in Edinburgh where he lodged a special defence of self defence, claiming Mr Ahmad wanted to perform sex acts on him.

Khan was 24 when he murdered Mr Ahmad at 54 Rosemount Viaduct.

Lord Beckett said: “You inflicted wounds he could not have survived, however rather than seeking medical assistance for him your own evidence was that you tied him up and left the scene. I infer that you locked the door to his room as you departed.

“You took his money, gambled away £900 and fled abroad.

“As a result of your vicious assault Mr Ahmad lost his life at the age of 41 and his family whom he was supporting lost him forever. You on the other hand remained at liberty for more than 37 years before you were arrested.”

Advocate Depute Murdoch Mactaggart told the court that a warrant for Khan’s arrest was granted on October 16, 1978, and continual efforts to trace him were made over the decades with no success.

Other police forces and Interpol were involved but Khan was not arrested until last year.

Gary Allan QC, defending Khan, said his client was in the UK from the mid 1980s and was registered with various public authoritie­s, and has been living openly in Wales for the last five years.

Mr Allan said Khan felt remorse for his actions.

He said: “He is very sorry that at his hands the deceased died and he is very sorry for the distress which he acknowledg­es must have been suffered by the family of the deceased. He wishes matters could have been very different.”

Mr Allan added: “He understand­s he will have this life sentence and he understand­s that in view of his age and health there is a significan­t risk he will die in prison.”

Lord Beckett asked the Crown and the police to consider whether any lessons can be learned from the circumstan­ces of the case and the long time it took to execute the warrant.

Mr Mactaggart said: “The Crown is very concerned about what happened in this case and that concern will be taken to the highest levels.”

Following the end of the trial Detective Superinten­dent Jim Smith of Police Scotland’s Major Investigat­ion Team said he welcomed Khan’s his conviction.

He added: “The fact that Mr Ahmad had provided employment and accommodat­ion for Khan, and generally looked out for him, makes the killing all the more deplorable.

“Thanks to diligent policing and the skilful use of forensic and investigat­ive techniques available to officers in the 1970s we were able to present a case 40 years on that stood the test of time. Mr Ahmad’s family have spent these years wondering if anyone would ever be held accountabl­e for his murder and I hope the outcome can give them some comfort knowing his killer will now be behind bars.

“The passage of time is never a barrier to ensuring that those who commit crime are brought to justice. Khan may have spent the last 40 years with what he did on his conscience, however, he now must face the stark reality and consequenc­es of his actions.”

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