A foreigner injured two people during a skirmish in the center of Prague, and the court deported her
The clash between foreigners took place on Saturday, May 15, 2021 on Palackého náměstí. Groups of young Ukrainians drank alcohol in the adjacent Zítkovy sady, and the drunk Allajar Babirov went among them. According to the indictment, in order to scold them for loud music. According to his own version, because he saw a fight and was interested in the health condition of the attacked man.
The prosecutor claimed that Uzbek had already pulled a butterfly-type knife from the Ukrainian in the park. “After the evidence, the court found a slightly different event than that described in the indictment,” said Lenka Cihlářová, chairwoman of the Senate of the Prague City Court. According to her, after a few minutes of quiet communication, Uzbek went to the tram stop, but some Ukrainians then fell to him with kicks and punches.
“They made it quite a lot of fun, attacking the defendant in an aggressive way. Very heroically – when he stood with his back to one of the attackers, he put his fist in his head. When the event happened, another kicked him in the body very heroically, “described the judge, who recorded the witnesses and city cameras.
Babirov then ran unexpectedly and from behind perhaps a randomly selected foreigner who had not joined the previous conflict. He cut a jugular vein and pierced his lungs. When acquaintances of the attacked man tried to stop Uzbek, he lightly wounded one of them with a knife on his shoulder and hand. The assailant tried to take the tram to the police, but the police tracked him down and detained them with the knife he had with him.
“The event was by no means planned or thoughtful. I had a trip somewhere else, unfortunately I went to use foreign people and I became the target of an attack, “said Babirov, 40. “I’m very happy that the boy survived, I can’t live with it. I’m sorry, “he added. She responded to the subsequent decision, which she released from custody for almost a year, with a crying relief.
He attacked out of excusable motive
Experts evaluated Babirov as a simpler and emotionally unstable personality. His lawyer suggested that he classify the act as an assassination attempt, not a murder. According to him, Uzbek was very upset and pulled out the knife for intimidation only after it surrounded him and beat a group of people.
“I’d compare it to a rat driven into a corner. He didn’t distinguish who the attacker was. Emotions won. He attacked against the group, not against the individual, “said the lawyer.
The court eventually ruled on the legal classification of personal injury for excusable motives before a maximum of four years in prison. He ordered Uzbek to compensate the damage caused by the health insurance company, which amounts to approximately 194 thousand crowns.
Babirov came to Europe in 2012 on a Polish visa. He has been living in the Czech Republic since 2014, illegally. He subsisted mainly on construction work.