Man accused of pushing wife from Arthur’s Seat was ‘abusive’ and ‘violent’

  • 3/30/2023
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A man accused of murdering his wife by pushing her from Arthur’s Seat in Edinburgh was overheard in hospital telling her that if she died in childbirth it “would be OK” because he “would be free”, a court has heard. Kashif Anwar, 29, is accused of killing Fawziyah Javed, 31, in September 2021 by pushing her from the peak in Holyrood Park, causing her multiple blunt force injuries that led to her death and that of her unborn child. Anwar denies all the charges against him, including one of acting in a threatening and abusive way towards his wife at a hotel the day before the alleged murder. The high court in Edinburgh heard on Thursday that a midwife spoke to Javed about her concerns after Anwar was overheard speaking to his wife at Leeds general infirmary on 23 August 2021. Elizabeth Petty, 41, who was working on the L44 ward that evening, said a patient told her Javed was told: “If you died during childbirth that would be OK. I would be free.” The midwife told the jury that, when asked if that was what was said, Javed, from Leeds, had confirmed it was, and that she appeared “scared” and “upset”. Teacher Francesca Cooper, 34, was in the bed neighbouring Javed’s and had reported the conversation. She sobbed as she told advocate depute Alex Prentice KC what she had heard, saying: “I could hear him repeatedly call her a bitch, repeatedly saying he should never have married her, wishing he never married her, and if one of them died during childbirth that would be good because they would be free from one another.” Javed’s mother, Nighat Yasmin Javed, also took to the witness box on Thursday. She said her concerns had heightened since the couple married in December 2020, and Javed told the court she was “very worried” about her daughter. “I said if you feel that you are in danger, just text me ‘I feel like cream cakes’, and I will contact the police,” she said. Javed said she did this because of the “abuse, the violence, the aggression and coercive control” in the relationship, which included, she said, Anwar taking £12,000 from her daughter’s bank account while she was sleeping. She said her daughter’s calls and texts were monitored by Anwar, and that between three or four months after the wedding her daughter wanted out of the marriage. Javed told the jury: “The accused was being abusive, controlling, manipulative, aggressive and violent towards her. She didn’t want to stay in a marriage like that, she wanted to leave.” The court was played a recording of Anwar’s wife, who worked as an employment lawyer, phoning a legal firm for advice on getting a divorce. Ian Duguid KC, Anwar’s defence, asked Javed about the rules of an Islamic divorce and if a pregnant woman could get one. She said while she did not know much about it, her daughter’s intention was to “get the ball rolling”. The trial, in its second day, also heard from James Duncan, 25, who was walking up Arthur’s Seat with his girlfriend on the evening of 2 September when Fawziyah Javed was found. He told the court: “There were a couple of screams to my recollection. One was from a female screaming, then I heard a male screaming after I heard the female scream.” He said soon afterwards, he saw Anwar with another woman who were looking for a charged mobile phone to call emergency services. Duncan said: “The gentleman said his wife had fallen off the summit and wanted me to call 999 to get in touch with ambulance or police or emergency services to get them to help with the situation.” In the first 999 call, operators were told she could be heard screaming after the fall. The court heard that in a second call, the accused told the ambulance service that they both fell. In cross-examination, Duncan, who told the court he had scaled the hill more than 100 times, said Anwar was wearing ordinary shoes and not hiking boots. The trial, before Lord Beckett, continues.

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