Source: Daily Mail UK
This is the horrifying moment gangsters chased and
killed an innocent 17-year-old student after mistaking him for a rival gang
member. CCTV footage shows victim Kwame Ofosu-Asare who was 'in the wrong place
at the wrong time' running away from Nelson Idiabeta, then 17, and Nathaniel
Okusanya, then 18.
Moments after the teenagers were captured running
after him and a friend, Kwame was stabbed 14 times in the back in a 'cowardly
and merciless' murder. Continue after the cut...
The 17-year-old Kwame in the picture above RHS was
mistaken for a rival in a 'poisonous and senseless' gang war, a court heard
today as Idiabeta and Okusanya were jailed for life.
The pair were members of the TN1 gang - Trust No One
- out to avenge one of their numbers who was stabbed by a rival gang member
from the GAS gang - Guns and Shanks - just hours earlier.
His killers had toured housing estates in Brixton to
find rival gang members and came upon the 17-year-old son of a sports broadcast
journalist and his friend, who had nothing to do with any gangs.
Kwame, a business student, promising footballer, a
budding actor and rapper, was walking back with a friend from a session at a
recording studio when they were confronted by Okusanya and Idiabeta in the
Moorlands Estate in Brixton.
Kwame and his friend with a 'sixth sense' ran away
into a cul de sac where his friend’s aunt lived in a desperate attempt to get
to safety - but she was not at home.
His friend managed to jump over a wall but Kwame was
trapped and then killed on March 2 of this year.
He shouted out he was from Catford and pleaded 'I’m
not from round here, I’m not from round here' but he was murdered by the pair
who had persuaded a shopper to buy them at least one substantial kitchen knife
just hours before the attack.
After an Old Bailey jury found the pair guilty
Nelson Idiabeta, now 18 was jailed for a minimum of 19 years while Nathaniel
Okusanya, 19, was jailed for 20 years.
Sentencing Judge Richard Marks QC said: 'I am
entirely satisfied having heard the evidence the background to this terrible
offence is to be found in revenge between two gangs.
'Around 1.15pm Garfield Stewart a member of TN1 gang
was stabbed 28 times while sitting in a bus while it was stationary at West
Norwood.
'It’s clear from the evidence a very short time from
that stabbing you found out about it and decided this stabbing needed to be
avenged.
'Your purpose was to carry out an attack on a GAS
gang member and anyone you believed to be so.
'You encountered two boys Kwame and his friend by
reason of they only being on the Moreland Estate.
'You believed them to be GAS gang members, they were
not and have no connection whatsoever with this gang.'
He said Kwame’s friend managed to escape but Kwame
'was not so fortunate'.
'He was heard to shout "I’m from Catford"
saying to you he was in effect not from around there and had no reason to be
chased. It was to no avail.
'He was violently attacked suffering 14 stab wounds,
three of which penetrated his lungs and one his liver.
'It would have been abundantly obvious to you he was
gravely injured but you ran off thinking only of your escape.'
He added: 'It was Kwame's misfortune to be in the
wrong place at the wrong time.'
But Judge Marks added Idiabeta, who was on bail at
the time for robbery, and Okusanya 'have shown no an iota of remorse.'
Crispin Aylett QC, prosecuting, told jurors:
'Kwame's death was but a part of a poisonous and senseless feud between two
rival gangs of youths in south London.'
Judge Marks said Kwame’s father, a sports presenter
in Ghana, described his son as 'vibrant, energetic, enthusiastic and promising
boy.'
The father, in a statement read to the court, added:
'Hours before his horrendous death he had gone to the studio to record a track
which he dedicated to his mother.
‘The sudden and tragic death of Kwame has deprived
us of a brother, son and friend.
'He is ever present in our minds. The damage Kwame’s
death has caused the family is irreparable. Our lives have been ruined and will
never be the same again.’
He was in the sixth-form of Forest Hill School, had
moved from Ghana to London in 2002, and excelled in sport, music and acting and
had great ambitions to make something of his life.
Idiabeta, who was living at a bail hostel in
Camberwell, had been in youth court on the morning Kwame was stabbed for
breaching his bail conditions for robbery but the prosecution could not find
his file so the case was adjourned for a week.
The day their friend Stewart was stabbed on the top
deck of a bus in West Norwood, CCTV cameras recorded them travelling to see him
at King’s College Hospital before heading to a shopping centre in Camberwell to
buy a knife from a Bargain Express.
When the shopkeeper refused to sell them the weapon
without seeing a passport or driving licence they asked a stranger to help,
claiming one of their mothers needed it for cooking.
The pair then got a taxi driver to take them to
Brixton and drop them off at the edge of the Moorlands Estate at 5.30pm.
At that time Kwame, who lived in Catford, happened
to be walking through the estate with one of his friends after leaving the
recording studio.
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