The court hears the defendant believed he was "killing a supernatural being rather than a human being" in a competition.
00:17, UK,
Friday
14
September
2018
Image:
Khalid Yousef was beheaded and mutilate
A former medical student has been cleared of murder on the grounds of insanity after he beheaded his friend in a betting shop.
Hassan Mustafa decapitated Khalid Yousef with a knife
before mutilating his face and one of his hands, Birmingham Crown Court
heard.
Yousef, a former housemate of the accused, was attacked by
Mustafa, 35 at the time of the killing, at a branch of Paddy Power in
Handsworth in January.
Jurors were invited to return a "special
verdict" of not guilty of murder by reason of insanity, if they believed
Mustafa did not know that what he was doing was wrong.
The court
heard Mustafa, who is suffering from paranoid schizophrenia, "believed
he was killing a supernatural being rather than a human being" in a
competition.
Prosecutor Jonathan Rees QC said the defendant and Mr Yousef were
Sudanese nationals who sought asylum in the UK five years ago and had
lived in Liverpool.
Mr Rees said 28-year-old Mr Yousef's wounds
suggested the mutilation had been "carried out with some skill" and
could have reflected the training Mustafa received while studying
medicine.
The prosecutor also reassured jurors that if they found
the defendant not guilty of murder by reason of insanity, Mustafa would
not be released until he was no longer considered a danger.