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Inquiry hearing into death of asylum seeker shot by police after hotel stabbings

Inquiry hearing into death of asylum seeker shot by police after hotel stabbings

Independent11-03-2025

Proceedings for a fatal accident inquiry (FAI) into the death of an asylum seeker who was shot by police after stabbing six people at a hotel are due to begin later.
Badreddin Abdalla Adam Bosh was shot and killed by police after he stabbed and seriously injured six people and attempts to use non-lethal weapons were unsuccessful.
Scotland's Lord Advocate Dorothy Bain decided it is in the public interest to hold a discretionary fatal accident inquiry into the incident at the Park Inn Hotel in Glasgow on June 26 2020.
Those injured by the 28-year-old Sudanese man included three asylum seekers, two hotel workers and police officer David Whyte who had responded to the initial emergency call.
A preliminary hearing will take place at Glasgow Sheriff Court on Tuesday ahead of the FAI which will take place at a later date yet to be determined.
Mr Bosh was one of hundreds of asylum seekers moved into hotels in Glasgow at the start of the Covid-19 lockdown in 2020.
The Crown Office said the decision to hold an inquiry follows a thorough and independent investigation by prosecutors into the wider circumstances leading to his death.
Previous investigation by prosecutors found police acted swiftly and decisively with the intention of protecting lives and that their actions were 'legitimate and proportionate'.
The purpose of an FAI includes determining the cause of death, the circumstances in which the death occurred, and establishing what reasonable precautions could have been taken to minimise the risk of future deaths in similar circumstances.
Unlike criminal proceedings, FAIs are inquisitorial in nature, and are used to establish facts rather than apportion blame.

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Badreddin Abdalla Adam Bosh, 28, an asylum seeker from Sudan, stabbed six people on June 26 2020. He was being housed at the Park Inn Hotel, West George Street, Glasgow, where the attack happened, and was one of hundreds of asylum seekers moved into hotels in Glasgow at the start of the Covid-19 lockdown in 2020. Mr Bosh was shot dead by police who attended the scene. A preliminary hearing at Glasgow Sheriff Court was told the inquiry will examine 'areas of dispute' including whether mental health assessment was sufficient; and whether tasers should be classified similarly to batons when used by police officers. The Home Office, Mears Group PLC, the Scottish Police Federation, Glasgow City Council, the Scottish Ambulance Service, and Migrant Help UK are some of the organisations which will have legal representation. Sheriff Principal Aisha Anwar said that an anonymity order for police officers involved has been granted and that the fatal accident inquiry is expected to take between 10 to 12 weeks. She said that the incident had been 'clearly distressing for all involved'. Last year, Lord Advocate Dorothy Bain decided it was in the public interest to hold a discretionary FAI. Emma Toner, representing Police Scotland, said: 'The principle area of interest is in the police response to the incident.' The hearing at Glasgow Sheriff Court was told that Police Scotland 'had no knowledge that the hotel was housing asylum seekers' and that there could have been the opportunity to 'de-escalate', according to Shelagh McCall KC, representing the Scottish Police Federation. Ms McCall said: 'Police Scotland had no knowledge that this hotel housed asylum seekers at relevant time. Had that been communicated there was the opportunity for community engagement with staff and residents at hotel. 'Community policing can help with issues before they escalate.' She said that other issues were 'in relation to a spontaneous firearms incident', and the armed police operating standard procedure, regarding 'communication difficulties' and 'whether there are others in the area which match the description of the suspect'. She said that many of the asylum seekers at the hotel did not speak English but had to communicate with armed police, and that the inquiry would hear evidence that tasers 'were used by trained officers who need permission to deploy' and 'should be treated like batons'. Sheriff Principal Anwar said that the scope for investigating mental health training for officers was 'too broad' but that 'whether they had been made aware of it, would be different'. Adam Black, representing NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde, said: 'One area of dispute is questions around assessment of Mr Bosh's mental health.' Sheriff Principal Anwar said: 'Clearly this incident was distressing for all those involved, there is keen interest in moving forward, and that all parties are prepared.' She fixed a further preliminary hearing for September 15.

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