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Man admits cutting woman’s throat in Aberdeen flat

The High Court in Edinburgh
The High Court in Edinburgh

A man who cut a woman’s throat in an unprovoked knife attack later told police that he had met a bleeding lady in the street and tried to help her.

Alif Miah turned up at the block of flats where he had carried out the assault and asked police, who had secured the area, for access to visit a friend but was refused.

When the 33-year-old was later detained he denied that he was responsible for the attack on 63-year-old Alexandra Crawford.

But the High Court in Edinburgh heard that the victim’s blood was found on the sleeves of his jacket and his DNA was on the handle of a blood-stained knife found in a drain at the rear of flats in Aberdeen’s Richmond Walk.

Unemployed Miah, of Rosemount Square, Aberdeen, admitted assaulting the victim to her severe injury, permanent disfigurement and to the danger of her life of September 24 last year in her home in Richmond Walk, when he appeared in court today.

An allegation that he had attempted to murder her was deleted.

He grabbed her by the hair, pulled her head back and struck her on the neck with a knife in the attack.

The court heard that the wound she suffered was described by an experienced paramedic as one of the worst he had ever seen. She later had sutures and 16 metal staples inserted to close the wound.

Advocate depute Ian Wallace said: “He was amazed that Ms Crawford was standing up straight.”

The prosecutor said the victim, who lived alone, had been approached by Miah outside her flat and he told her he knew both her and her son.

They went into her flat and started drinking and at one stage Miah asked her to go through to the bathroom.

Mr Wallace said: “He stood behind her, grabbed her by the hair and pulled her back towards him. Ms Crawford turned towards the accused and saw that he had a black handled knife in his hand.”

Miah put his arm across her chest and cut her throat. She staggered out of the bathroom and collapsed on the floor, drifting in and out of consciousness.

The knife attacker left the flat and came back on several occasions. At one stage the victim asked him why he had attacked her and he claimed that he had not done anything, but she had fallen and burst her nose.

Miah eventually finally left and she locked her door and went to bed. The following day she got up and tried to clean the blood.

Mr Wallace said: “She did not want to report the incident to the police.”

At one stage the stabbing victim went to a family doctor’s practice and asked for an appointment with a nurse.

The advocate depute said: “When she showed the receptionist the wound on her neck, it was explained to her that she would have to go to hospital for treatment.”

She later went home and sought help from a neighbour and told him she did not want to involve the police or go to hospital.

He contacted another neighbour and asked him to call an ambulance.

The advocate depute said the victim had later explained that after the attack she had been very scared of her assailant and what might happen if she spoke to the police, but had agreed to speak to them after being persuaded by her son.

She said she was no longer scared of him, but wanted to forget about the incident and did not want to give evidence in court.

A judge remanded Miah in custody and deferred sentence on him for the preparation of a background report.

Lord Stewart told him: “You have obviously pled guilty to a serious offence.”