Malta Independent

‘I saw she had a long cut on her chest’

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He told the court that as he was on the balcony he heard loud voices and walked towards his mother’s house. He then entered the house through a screendoor leading into the garden. He saw his mother gasping for breath while Mr Popa was on top of her at the bottom of the staircase in the residence. He said that Mr Popa kept asking Ms Mintoff Bland “Who is he?” to which Ms Mintoff Bland repeatedly replied “There is nobody”.

Mr Mainwaring then ran towards Popa, who then lunged at him.

“I saw my mum lying on her back, and it was clear he was on top of her,” he said.

“Even though it was dark I saw the reflection of a large silver blade, I lifted my leg to protect my stomach, and so he stabbed me twice in my left thigh,” he added.

Following the stabbing, he said, his initial reaction was instinctiv­e and he started to leave the way he had come in. He then walked two metres outside of the house, where he began to process what had happened. He then let out a loud scream.

He then ran back in, where he met his mother, who he said must have broken free when Mr Popa lunged at him.

Mr Mainwaring and his mother then proceeded to make their way to the other residence, where he realised she had been grievously harmed.

“She was in an intense state of shock so I wrapped my arm around her,” he said.

He then called out to his friends who were in the house and went to the health centre.

He told the court, which is presided over by Magistrate Joseph Mifsud, that he did not know much of their relationsh­ip, as it was “her business”. He knew they argued a lot and that his mother had informed him and his friends that their relationsh­ip had ended and that if he came to the house not to let him in.

Anna Marinovic, the girlfriend of Mr Mainwaring and resident at his house, was next to testify and she informed the court that a week prior to the incident she witnessed a violent encounter between Ms Mintoff Bland and Mr Popa. She said that while picking lemons in the garden with a friend they saw Ms Mintoff Bland and Mr Popa arguing over the terminatio­n of their relationsh­ip. Mr Popa then pushed himself against Ms Mintoff Bland, she claimed.

Ms Marinovic and her friend then went inside to stop the altercatio­n. Once, they stopped, the four of them had a drink on the table. Mr Popa sat silently, she said.

Ms Mintoff Bland told Ms Marinovic not to let Mr Popa inside again.

However, Ms Marinovic admitted that they did once let him in, as he resisted when they refused his entry. She said that they did argue but nothing serious happened.

On 24 October, she recalled how she heard them arguing “as always”. She then saw Mr Mainwaring in the balcony upstairs, and while she had dinner she heard Mr Mainwaring screaming loudly. She then ran outside and saw them running towards her.

“I saw she had a long cut on her chest, and I don’t know how but I already knew something bad had happened,” she said.

Mark Napier, from Kalkara, lived with Mr Mainwaring at the time of the attack. He told the court that while he was getting olives from the olive tree, he noticed Mr Mainwaring shouting.

“We ran towards him and we saw him carrying Yana,” he said.

After assisting in taking his friend and his friend’s mother to the health centre, he returned to the property with Aaron Attard, another friend who lived at the residence.

He said that there were police telling Mr Popa to exit the residence. Then, he explained, the fire within the building broke the glass of the window on the second storey. He then proceeded to contact the fire department.

Dr Daniel Vella, a court expert, explained that the fire originated from the living room, on one of two sofas and table behind it which held some appliances.

“It can be said that the appliances potentiall­y started the fire. However, I exclude this completely as the sockets were not completely burned as they would be if the fire began from the electrical appliance.”

He also said that the sofas are flammable so they could be easily ignited with just a lighter.

When asked by Dr Joe Giglio, appearing parte civile for Ms Mintoff Bland and her son, whether or not he saw the accused, Mr Napier said: “I did not see the accused. I know that they found him in the tree later, but then I could not see him”.

Mr Attard, recounted the same events as both Ms Marinovic and Mr Napier did before. He did identify that the tree in which Mr Popa was found was in front of the door of Ms Mintoff Bland’s residence.

The defence is represente­d by lawyer Benjamin Valenzia.

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