Branded A Coward

The policewoman, left bloodied and sobbing from a broken nose after an attempted arrest at Manchester Airport turned violent, has branded her assailant a ‘coward’.

As university dropout Mohammed Fahir Amaaz was imprisoned for three-and-a-half years, Lydia Ward accused him of showing ‘not one ounce’ of remorse for using her ‘as a punch bag’.

Delivering her powerful statement directly to the 21-year-old, the officer – now promoted to sergeant – told him: ‘You changed my face.’

She criticised Amaaz for having ‘played the victim’ when misleading footage of the aftermath of the incident filmed by onlookers went viral and having ‘allowed the public to feel sorry for you’.

Sgt Ward also movingly disclosed she had been forced to bring her newborn child with her when she gave evidence, telling Amaaz a court was ‘no place for a baby’. 

Challenging him to ‘take a good look at me’ and recognise the 5ft 2in, 8st woman behind the police uniform, she valiantly spelt out the lasting physical and mental trauma caused by his shocking and unprovoked attack.

‘I want you to know I am not weak,’ Sgt Ward told Amaaz.

‘No matter how this has affected me or impacted on my life, I will not allow you to see me as weak.

‘You used me as a punch bag, but I will get back up, and I will show you how strong I am.’

The second policewoman he battered, PC Ellie Cook, meanwhile, told of how she has been left ‘broken’ and her dreams of one day becoming a close protection officer are on hold.

In a case which sparked accusations of police racism and claims of two-tier justice, Amaaz and his brother Muhammad Amaad, 26, fought police officers beside a car park pay station at Manchester Airport’s Terminal Two in July 2024.

The incident started when Amaaz headbutted Shameem Akhtar, a Kuwaiti vacationer he had accused of racially insulting his mother. They had met on an incoming aircraft from Pakistan via Qatar.

Sgt Ward – then a constable – and two armed colleagues caught up with then-19-year-old Amaaz as the group were paying for parking, and they took hold of him from either side ahead of an attempt to arrest him.

Instead, Amaaz fought back before both brothers – from Rochdale – started hurling punches at the officers.

The teenager hit Sgt Ward in the face, sending her sprawling to the ground, before repeatedly hitting PC Cook.

His brother, Amaad, meanwhile, overpowered PC Zachary Marsden and began raining punches down before Amaaz joined in.

The brothers were eventually both arrested after PC Cook fired her 50,000-volt Taser at Amaaz, who fell to the floor.

Amid the chaos, PC Marsden booted the teenager in the face and aimed a stamp close by.

Footage of the kick was filmed by onlookers and went viral online, with protesters taking to the streets holding ‘Black Lives Matter’ placards and calling for the police to be ‘defunded’.

But there was a fierce backlash after leaked CCTV footage revealed the brutality PC Marsden and his two female colleagues had been subjected to just seconds before.

To widespread public fury, it took 150 days for prosecutors to announce that PC Marsden would not be charged with any offence. 

Instead, the brothers were charged with assaulting the three officers. 

The Crown Prosecution Service has emphasised that the delay was caused by the necessity to wait for concurrent police and Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) investigations.

A trial last year saw horrifying bodycam footage of the brutal brutality meted out by Amaaz, who threw a total of ten punches in the melee.

But while Amaaz was convicted of causing actual bodily harm to Sgt Ward and assaulting PC Cook, as well as assaulting the passenger, jurors could not reach a verdict on whether either brother had assaulted PC Marsden.

In court, they insisted that they were acting in self-defence or the defence of one another. 

Amaaz also denied knowing the two officers he hit in the face were female, saying he had ‘nothing but love and respect for women’.

Prosecutors controversially announced that they would not be requesting a second retrial after a fresh jury at Liverpool Crown Court failed to reach a decision on whether either had attacked PC Marsden last month.

This week, Greater Manchester’s ‘anti-woke’ Chief Constable Sir Stephen Watson said he wanted anyone who assaulted his officers to be prosecuted to the ‘fullest extent of the law’ – but declined to criticise the decision.

Detectives, however, reportedly supported a third trial, according to the Manchester Evening News.

Amaaz appeared via videolink from jail for his sentencing. Amaaz has been detained on remand since being found guilty of assaulting the policewomen.

Jailing him for 42 months and saying all the assaults had been ‘unprovoked’, Judge Neil Flewitt accused Amaaz of showing ‘a total lack of remorse’.

The judge said the policewomen had ‘posed no threat to you or your brother’, adding that he was satisfied Amaaz knew both Sgt Ward and PC Cook were female and police officers when he punched them. 

Due to her small stature, Sgt Ward was ‘clearly no match for a strong young man’, he added.

Referencing ‘online abuse’ said to have been targeted at the brothers and their families, Judge Flewitt said he could not help but ‘wonder whether that was, in part, as a result of your decision to go public at an early stage with mobile phone footage of the aftermath without any reference to what had gone before’.

‘It would have been open to you, having seen the CCTV footage, to acknowledge that there was no justification for your attacks,’ he told Amaaz.

‘Instead, you sought to blame others for what was clearly your responsibility and to portray yourself as a victim.’

Earlier, Imran Khan KC, representing Amaaz, had urged the judge to be ‘cautious about making assumptions’ that ‘Asian men are violent’ or have ‘no prospects’ when he determined the sentence. 

But Judge Flewitt told Amaaz he could ‘rest assured’ that the sentence he was imposing was ‘uninfluenced’ by his ethnic background. 

Amaaz showed no sign of emotion as he was jailed. 

Earlier, while testifying in the retrial, Sgt. Ward gave a stirring victim impact statement about the trauma of having to bring her infant to court while she was still nursing him.

Dressed in black trousers and a black and white sleeveless top, she spoke calmly but powerfully about how she still ‘struggles to make sense of it all’.

Expressionless Amaaz – pictured on a TV screen and wearing a stripy T-shirt – looked straight ahead as Sgt Ward spelt out ‘how you made me feel and how you have changed who I am forever’.

‘Before I begin, I want you to take a good look at me,’ she said. ‘Take away that I am a police officer. Look at me, standing here. What do you see?

‘I’ll tell you what you see. You see a female. A female who is 5ft 2in, and at the time of the incident, I weighed no more than 8 stone.

‘You are a male, and you chose to attack me without a second thought.

‘You chose to attack a female. You knocked me to the ground with one punch, with so much force you broke my nose.’

Sgt Ward challenged him: ‘How would you feel if it was your mother standing here today explaining how she was violently assaulted by a male?

‘What you did was cowardly.’

Sgt Ward said she joined the police eight years ago ‘because I wanted to help people’ and ‘took pride’ in her work.

She added that while ‘conflict and violence’ were part of being in uniform, normally, there are ‘indications that a situation is escalating’.

‘The day you attacked us was different,’ she said.

‘We were totally blindsided, and I felt like it came from nowhere. I never in a million years thought you would have attacked me the way you did.’

The officer told Amaaz she remembered him looking ‘directly into my eyes’ before throwing the punch.

‘Could you see how scared I was? I was petrified. I just remember hitting the floor and thinking: “This is it.” I felt instant pain, and then I saw the blood,’ Sgt Ward said.

‘I have never seen anyone so violent. I have never been so scared. It was utterly terrifying.’

Sgt Ward said she was ‘angered’ by how Amaaz initially ‘played the victim’ when ‘only part of the footage was out in the public’.

‘You are not a victim,’ she said. ‘I am the one who was injured, not you. You had the whole world listening to you, and you showed no remorse. Not one ounce.

‘You allowed the public to feel sorry for you. You made out like we had done something wrong when all we were doing was our job.’

Sgt Ward said she needed an operation to fix her nose and still has a scar and a lump on her brow.

‘I look at myself now, and I can see the difference in my face compared to how it was before this happened.

‘You did that to me. You changed my face. What was it that I did that was so wrong you felt you needed to attack me?

‘I fear for the women in your life. If you can do that to a female police officer, what are you capable of to the women you know?’

She also spoke of the ‘stress’ of having to attend court to give evidence during the first trial last year, a month before being due to give birth.

Then the possibility of a retrial meant her ordeal was ‘hanging over me’ when she was meant to be enjoying bonding with her baby, even having to bring the infant to court with her.

‘I shouldn’t have had to bring my baby to court,’ she told Amaaz. ‘It is no place for a baby.’

Finally, she told him: ‘You deserve no more of my time.’

In PC Cook’s victim impact statement – read out by prosecutor Paul Greaney KC – she told Amaaz how her life that day ‘changed forever’.

Having joined the police in 2018, she was ‘loving’ her new role as a firearms officer, but her ‘dream’ was to one day join the Met Police as a close protection officer.

‘I don’t think you will ever begin to understand what you have done to me, or my family,’ she said. ‘I used to be happy. I used to be driven. I used to be focused. I am now broken.’

PC Cook said being called out to arrest a suspect over a headbutting ‘sounded like a routine job’, adding: ‘How wrong I was.

‘I remember feeling punches in quick succession and with such power behind them that I thought I was being attacked by three to four people.

‘I was terrified. The pain was excruciating with each blow, my vision went black, and I was so disorientated.’

Recalling how she managed to deploy her Taser despite her injuries, she asked Amaaz: ‘What would you have done if I hadn’t?’

In the weeks that followed, PC Cook said she ‘threw myself back into work’.

‘I thought I was fine, but I wasn’t,’ she added.

Seven months later, she was signed off work with trauma, saying she still feels ‘trapped’ in the events of that day. As a result, she has given up being a firearms officer, meaning her career aspirations are ‘on hold’.

‘It hurts and upsets me that you chose to spin the narrative the way you did,’ she said to Amaaz. ‘All you needed to do was to say you had made a massive mistake, own it.

‘But instead, you chose to put us all at risk, even yourselves. Each of our faces were plastered all over national news. Everyone knew who we were. I had to move out of my home, a home where I felt safe and secure. For what? For doing my job?’

She told Amaaz: ‘I hope the words I have read today stay with you for the rest of your life. I hope you have flashbacks of what I am saying, the way I have flashbacks of that day.

‘I hope you never forget, because I know I won’t.’

After reading out her statement, Mr Greaney said it was the prosecution’s case that Amaaz threw a second punch at Sgt Ward, which only failed to connect as she had been knocked to the floor by the first one.

Amaaz ‘punched with full force a woman who was smaller and slighter than him’, he added.

The assault on PC Cook involved ‘substantial force’ and was ‘persistent’, he submitted.

In mitigation, Mr Khan cited positive character references about his ‘caring’ nature, arguing that Amaaz was ‘somebody who seeks to right wrongs’, he submitted.

Headbutting Abdulkareem Ismaeil because his mother had accused the air passenger of racially abusing her on her incoming flight was ‘typical’ of his ‘caring nature’, he claimed.

Similarly, his actions in punching the two policewomen were motivated by ‘an instinct to protect his brother’, he added.

Amaaz was ‘a young man who put others before himself,’ Mr Khan said.

The barrister argued that the initial actions of the officers at the pay station were ‘unlawful’ and that Amaaz’s punches constituted ‘excessive self-defence’.

However, this account was rejected by Judge Flewitt, who said the assaults were ‘unprovoked’.

Amaaz’s supporters, including his brother and previous co-accused Amaad, crowded the public gallery.

After the sentencing, GMP chief constable Sir Stephen said: ‘This incident began after a man was headbutted in a public place in front of his family. 

‘Our officers were responding quickly to precisely the sort of outrageous criminal behaviour that rightly offends the public.

‘In undertaking their duties, officers were met with resistance and violence, followed by online vilification, condemnation and adverse commentary from those who did not have the full facts.

‘It is vital that officers get the respect and support they deserve for routinely putting themselves in harm’s way to protect the public. 

‘Assaults on police officers are sadly all too common – 35 of my officers are assaulted every week across Greater Manchester – and such incidents can never be justified.’

Last month, prosecutors announced they would not be pursuing a second retrial after two juries had deliberated for nearly 30 hours, with a grinning Amaad walking free from court to cheers and applause.

Earlier, Mr Greaney KC said after consideration ‘at the highest level’ the CPS had decided it could not ‘lawfully’ seek a third trial of either brother.

Afterwards, the brothers’ lawyer accused PC Marsden of ‘taking a “rugby style” kick’ at Amaaz’s head and called for him to be placed on trial.

Aamer Anwar also claimed the brothers had been ‘subjected to an orgy of race hate’ online since being charged, alleging social media had contributed to a ‘lynch mob mentality’.

Neither of the brothers had been in trouble with the police before, and six members of the family – including older brother Abid – are current or former officers with Greater Manchester Police.

The IOPC is still looking into PC Marsden and may send him back to the Crown Prosecution Service for possible charges.

Investigations are still ongoing for a second male Greater Manchester Police officer who, along with PC Marsden, challenged onlookers who were recording the altercation.

The same officer is also understood to have been placed under criminal investigation by the IOPC over the leaking of CCTV footage of the altercation to the Manchester Evening News.

Amaaz was indeed a coward, but on the flip side, there should be a minimum height and strength requirement to be a police officer because how is a 5-foot-2, 8 stone copper going to defend or arrest anyone using force?

It goes without saying, though, that an assault on a police officer should be mandatory jail time, but then an assault on anyone should be mandatory jail time, depending on the circumstances, but sadly, this is the result of Britain going soft and woke.

Some people would call this man an animal, but we shouldn’t use ‘animal’ in such a derogatory way because most animals are extremely adorable and cuddly. He was just a disgusting human being.

Published by Angela Lloyd

My vision on life is pretty broad, therefore I like to address specific subjects that intrigue me. Therefore I really appreciate the world of politics, though I have no actual views on who I will vote for, that I will not tell you, so please do not ask! I am like an observation station when it comes to writing, and I simply take the news and make it my own. I have no expectations, I simply love to write, and I know this seems really odd, but I don't get paid for it, I really like what I do and since I am never under any pressure, I constantly find that I write much better, rather than being blanketed under masses of paperwork and articles that I am on a deadline to complete. The chances are, that whilst all other journalists are out there, ripping their hair out, attempting to get their articles completed, I'm simply rambling along at my convenience creating my perfect piece. I guess it must look pretty unpleasant to some of you that I work for nothing, perhaps even brutal. Perhaps I have an obvious disregard for authority, I have no idea, but I would sooner be working for myself, than under somebody else, excuse the pun! Small I maybe, but substantial I will become, eventually. My desk is the most chaotic mess, though surprisingly I know where everything is, and I think that I would be quite unsuited for a desk job. My views on matters vary and I am extremely open-minded to the stuff that I write about, but what I write about is the truth and getting it out there, because the people must be acquainted. Though I am quite entertained by what goes on in the world. My spotlight is mostly to do with politics, though I do write other material as well, but it's essentially politics that I am involved in, and I tend to concentrate my attention on that, however, information is essential. If you have information the possibilities are endless because you are only limited by your own imagination...

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