Asylum
seekers, 17, sentenced for girl's rape
8
December 2025
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c74x9ln0y4qo
Annie
Delaney,in Leamington SpaandShannen Headley,West Midlands
Warwickshire
Police Two men with dark hair in front of a grey background. One has a blue
tshirt on and the other has a white T-shirt on.Warwickshire Police
Israr
Niazal (left) and Jan Jahanzeb (right) were sentenced after admitting to the
rape of a 15-year-old girl
Two
teenage Afghan nationals seeking asylum in the UK have each been given
custodial sentences for the rape of a 15-year-old girl in Leamington Spa.
Jan
Jahanzeb and Israr Niazal, both 17, had pleaded guilty to the 10 May attack at
a hearing in October.
During a
sentencing hearing at Warwick Crown Court, Judge Sylvia de Bertodano lifted
reporting restrictions on naming the boys following applications by media
organisations including the BBC.
Deportation
papers have been served to Jahanzeb. He was sentenced to a youth detention term
of 10 years and eight months. Niazal, about whom the judge invited the
government to recommend deportation, was sentenced to nine years and 10 months.
Both will
start their sentences in a Young Offenders' Institution and move to prison at a
later date.
The pair
were also made to sign the Sex Offenders Register for life and given an
indefinite restraining order.
Ahead of
the sentencing, the court heard an impact statement on behalf of the victim in
which she said: "The day I was raped changed me as a person. Now every
time I go out I don't feel safe.
"Watching
[other family members] feeling crushed as they believe they should have been
there or done something is particularly painful for me, even though I know they
couldn't have done anything to stop what happened.
"I
hate the fact that I am now looked at as a victim, even though that's exactly
what I am."
'Horrific'
attack
At the
opening of the sentencing hearing, prosecutor Shawn Williams said the
defendants, who each appeared in the dock assisted by their own interpreter,
were unaccompanied child asylum seekers.
Jahanzeb
fled Afghanistan and underwent an age assessment after arriving in the UK in
January, which concluded he was 17, Mr Williams said.
Niazal
arrived in November last year. He was initially accommodated in Kent before
being moved into local authority care in the Warwickshire area.
The rape,
which took place after the victim became separated from friends on a grassed
area, was described as "horrific" during legal submissions regarding
reporting restrictions in the case.
Mr
Williams told the court that video evidence showed Jahanzeb with the victim and
speaking in Pashto - the official language of Afghanistan - to summon Niazal to
join him.
Footage
from a mobile phone recovered by the police was highly distressing, Mr Williams
said, adding the victim had screamed for help but Jahanzeb had placed his hand
over her mouth.
He said
Jahanzeb and Niazal led the highly distressed victim into a
"den-type" area in parkland in Leamington Spa where they attacked
her.
The
victim had repeatedly shouted for Jahanzeb to let go of her as she was led
away.
She was
later assisted by a member of the public who advised her to contact the police
and stayed with her until she was safe.
'Something
broke in us'
Explaining
her decision to lift reporting restrictions, the judge said keeping them in
place could lead to speculation which might see innocent people being targeted.
"A
lack of information stokes public anger and leads to the unchecked spread of
false information," she said.
In a
further impact statement from the victim's mother, she said: "We have
watched our vibrant, happy and confident daughter shrink down and suffer with
anxiety so bad, she is often physically sick."
Speaking
of the attack, she said "something broke in all of us that day".
After the
pair were sentenced, Det Ch Insp Richard Hobbs from Warwickshire Police said:
"Jahanzeb and Niazal went out of their way to befriend the victim with the
intention of raping her.
"The
length of their sentence reflects the severity of their crime and the need to
protect the public from them."

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