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Sikh murder suspect ‘stabbed student Henry Nowak after he was called p*** and had turban pulled off’

Undated family handout photo issued by Hampshire Constabulary of Henry Nowak, 18, who died after suffering a stab wound to the chest while on a night out with his football team-mates. Mr Nowak, suffered a puncture wound to his chest and two to the back of his leg during an altercation with two men in Belmont Road, Portswood, Southampton, on Wednesday. He died at the scene. Issue date: Sunday December 7, 2025. PA Photo. Photo credit should read: Family Handout/PA Wire NOTE TO EDITORS: This handout photo may only be used in for editorial reporting purposes for the contemporaneous illustration of events, things or the people in the image or facts mentioned in the caption. Reuse of the picture may require further permission from the copyright holder.
Henry Nowak, 18, died after suffering a stab wound to the chest while on a night out with his football team-mates (Picture: Family Handout/PA Wire)

A Sikh man said he stabbed student Henry Nowak in self-defence after being racially abused, a court heard.

Vickrum Digwa, 23, is on trial at Southampton Crown Court over the death of the 18-year-old who was walking back from celebrating a football team night out at university in December.

The court heard Digwa was carrying his kirpan, a 21cm blade ceremonial blade, which the prosecution says caused five stab wounds to Mr Nowak, including two to the back of his legs and a fatal wound to the chest.

Digwa said that he had been walking near his home when he stepped onto the road and saw Mr Nowak walking towards him, looking ‘drunk’, not walking in a straight line and ‘stumbling a little’.

He said that Mr Nowak then said to him: ‘You could have moved up a little bit more.’

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Digwa said: ‘I then turned around and said ‘You’re right, I could have moved up, carry on with your day’.

‘I then said ‘You’re drunk, I am just trying to get to my car, you’re right, sorry’.

‘He then said ‘You P***s think you lot can do what you want’.

‘He was saying stuff ‘You think you are a bad man’, he was saying stuff like ‘I am from Essex, you do not know what people from Essex are on’.’

Digwa said he felt that Mr Nowak was ‘threatening’ him and saying to him ‘You think you’re a bad boy’ before Mr Nowak pulled out his phone to record him.

He said: ‘I was thinking in my mind he’s recording me and this has just escalated.

‘During these months there had been a lot of attacks on Sikhs and a lot of them had been videoed as well by the attackers.’

Digwa said he then reached to block the phone and grabbed it, which he said was followed by Mr Nowak punching him because he wanted his phone back.

He said that Mr Nowak then punched off his turban and grabbed him by the hair, pulling him so he bent over.

Digwa said: ‘He started saying ‘I am going to f*** you up, I am going to kill you’. I felt like that he was going to use my kirpan on me.’

He said at this point he pulled his kirpan knife out of its sheath and stabbed Mr Nowak to the back of his legs but said he was not aware of Mr Nowak being stabbed in the chest.

The defendant said it was at this point that his brother arrived which then led to the emergency services being called.

When asked why he had not told police that he had stabbed Mr Nowak, he said: ‘I was scared, this is the first time anything like this had ever happened.’

Digwa said that he had asked his mother, who along with his father arrived at the scene, to hold his kirpan while he picked up his religious items which had fallen to the ground during the incident.

The prosecution said that Kaur took the kirpan back to the nearby family home where it was later found.

Digwa said: ‘I felt abused, scared, it made me feel a bit better that I had my family there. My mind was fuzzy, everything went on so quickly, I couldn’t comprehend everything that was going on.’

He added that the first time he was aware that Mr Nowak had been stabbed in the chest was in his first police interview.

Digwa said that he found out that Mr Nowak had died while in the police station and said: ‘I cried, I was scared. I didn’t mean to do it and I am sorry it happened.’

He denies murder and carrying a knife in public. His mother, Kiran Kaur, 53, denies assisting an offender.

The trial continues.

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