Husband ‘calmly walked off’ after stabbing wife to death in front of their baby son

Husband 'casually walked off' after slashing wife's throat in front of their baby in the street
Habibur Masum (right) launched a ‘ferocious’ knife attack on Kulsuma Akter (left) after confronting her on a street in Bradford, West Yorkshire (Picture: PA)

A husband ‘casually walked off’ after stabbing his wife to death in the middle of the street, a court has heard.

Habibur Masum, 26, repeatedly knifed Kulsuma Akter, 27, to death after confronting her as she pushed their seven-month-old son in a pram in Bradford, West Yorkshire on April 6 last year.

Jurors at Bradford Crown Court have been told Masum tracked Kulsuma to a refuge in the city where she had been staying ‘to escape his violence, jealousy and controlling behaviour’.

Prosecutors say he launched a ‘ferocious’ knife attack leaving her with multiple stab injuries, including one which severed her jugular vein.

One horrified witness told police he saw what looked like a man trying to drag a woman off a pram and ‘punching her in the abdomen’.

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In his statement, read to the court today, he said: ‘I did step forward to see if I could help the woman but then I realised he had a knife in his hand.

‘I didn’t see the knife or blood but I saw the stabbing motion which made it obvious he was stabbing her. He then overpowered her and threw her down in front of a car.

‘The female was still screaming and then the screaming stopped. She wasn’t shouting words or a name but was screaming in agony and pain.’

The witness said: ‘Within seconds the guy stood up and walked off down the street.

first picture of Kulsuma Akter with Habibur Masum - at their wedding.
Jurors have heard Ms Akter had come to Bradford to be housed in a refuge ‘to escape (Masum’s) violence, jealousy and controlling behaviour’

‘At that point I wasn’t sure if… this was a male stabbing random people so I turned my family round and started walking back to our home address.

‘I kept an eye on the male as I was concerned for my family. I saw him throw what I assumed was the weapon over a fence.

‘He then dusted his hands and calmly carried on walking.’

Another woman said she was in a car with her sister and sister-in-law when she heard screaming and saw a man stabbing a woman.

Her statement described how she saw the woman falling to the floor and the man ‘casually walking off down the street’ before throwing the knife away.

The court heard Ms Akter had been moved from her home in Oldham to the refuge in January 2024 after telling police that Masum had assaulted her, held a knife to her throat and threatened to kill her over a ‘completely innocuous’ message from a male colleague.

Steven Wood KC, prosecuting, said of the latter incident: ‘In what you may think was a chilling prediction of what he was to do in April of the following year, he told Kulsuma, “I am going to murder you, and the police will be taking me”.’

Court artist drawing by Elizabeth Cook of Habibur Masum appearing in the dock at Bradford Magistrates' Court, West Yorkshire, charged with the murder of Kulsuma Akter, who was stabbed to death as she pushed her baby in a pram in a city centre on Saturday. Picture date: Thursday April 11, 2024. PA Photo. See PA story COURTS Bradford. Photo credit should read: Elizabeth Cook/PA Wire
Masum denies murdering Ms Akter but has pleaded guilty to manslaughter and possession of a knife (Picture: Elizabeth Cook/PA)

In a statement she made to police which was read in court, Ms Akter said: ‘I was very frightened when he was holding the knife as I believed what he was telling me and that he might kill me… I do not want to stay with him anymore.’

She told officers her relationship with her husband of 18 months was ‘usually good’ but that ‘recently he has been controlling me… taking my phone off me and not letting me contact anyone’.

In a short opening address to jurors, Frida Hussain KC, defending Masum, said: ‘You will need to consider whether he attacked her because he was triggered by something that she said or did that caused him to lose his self-control.’

She told the jury they would also need to consider whether at the time he ‘was suffering from an abnormality of mental function’.

Masum denies murdering Ms Akter but has pleaded guilty to manslaughter and possession of a knife.

He also denies two charges of assault, one count of making threats to kill and one charge of stalking.

The trial continues.

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