Teens detained for machete murder of boy on bus

Undated family handout file photo of Kelyan Bokassa in a cap.Image source, Met Police
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Kelyan Bokassa was fatally stabbed by two teenagers on a bus

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Two teenagers have been given life sentences for murdering a 14-year-old boy who was attacked with machetes on a bus in south-east London.

Aspiring rapper Kelyan Bokassa was stabbed 27 times as he sat on the back seat of a route 472 bus in Woolwich, south-east London, on 7 January.

The defendants, now 16, previously pleaded guilty to Kelyan's murder and possessing a knife. They were both sentenced to serve a minimum term of 15 years and 10 months.

In a victim impact statement read to the Old Bailey, Kelyan's mother Marie Bokassa said: "I stand here not just as a mother but as a broken soul whose life changed forever the day my child's life was taken from me by another child."

During the sentence hearing the court heard Kelyan had cried "take me to my mum's, I want my mum", as he made his way through the bus, before his legs buckled as he bled heavily from a wound to the leg.

Kelyan in a blue hoodie and wearing a white rucksack. Image source, Family handout
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Ms Bokassa told the court her son had loved food, cooking and football, and brought her flowers on her birthday

Ms Bokassa said she had spent her son's 15th birthday at his graveside.

"I ask myself what has happened to those two boys that has resulted in that terrible act of violence, and I cannot imagine how can they be so angry," she said.

"What they did was horrific and I do not know what has led them to do this, and maybe I will never."

Sentencing the pair, Judge Mark Lucraft KC told the court: "For any parent to lose a child is a tragedy. No sentence of a court can truly reflect the loss of a young life."

The Old Bailey heard the youths appeared to have been tipped off that Kelyan was on the bus before they boarded.

Members of the public sobbed loudly and hid their faces as footage of the attack on Kelyan was shown in court, while the defendants gave no visible reaction in the dock.

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The two killers were captured on CCTV fleeing the scene while still holding their machetes following the murder

Prosecutor Deanna Heer KC said Kelyan had boarded the 472 bus just after 14:00 GMT to attend an appointment at the Youth Justice Centre in Woolwich.

CCTV footage showed he went to sit on the back seat on the top deck, with a small kitchen knife in the waistband of his trousers.

Ms Heer said the teenager looked around and out of the windows before taking his seat "giving every impression that he was concerned for his safety".

The defendants, who cannot be named for legal reasons, boarded the bus 20 minutes later, each armed with identical machetes hidden in their clothes.

The pair walked towards Kelyan "with purpose" and without speaking a word to their victim, thrust their machetes at him 27 times while smiling. The attack lasted 14 seconds.

Ms Heer said: "Kelyan Bokassa had no time to reach for his own knife, which remained in his trousers, and instead tried in vain to protect himself with his school bag.

"There were several other passengers on the top deck who fled in panic when they realised what was happening. They describe hearing intense screaming from the back of the bus and the victim shouting, 'Help. Help. I've been stabbed'."

CCTV still taken from inside the bus showing two youths with blurred faces holding a machete. A rucksack can be seen on the back seatImage source, Met Police
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The attack was captured on CCTV cameras

The bus driver activated his emergency alarm just before 14:27 and the defendants fled when the vehicle stopped at Woolwich Ferry.

CCTV showed Kelyan stumbled down the aisle to the stairs, where another passenger went to help him.

Members of the public flagged down a passing police car and officers found Kelyan had collapsed and his body was limp. Despite attempts to save him, Kelyan died at the scene at 15:23.

One of the machetes was discarded in the River Thames, but later recovered.

The defendants were arrested on 15 January after a manhunt by Met Police officers and were charged the next day.

The court heard both have previous convictions for carrying blades in public.

Kelyan had been in care and had spent time at a children's home in Deal, Kent.

Outside the court, a statement read on behalf of Ms Bokassa said: "To the young people who carry knives, I beg you to stop before you raise that blade.

"Don't let a moment of anger steal your future. Don't let the streets raise you in a way your mother never would. There is no power in death, only loss."

Samantha Yelland, from the Crown Prosecution Service, said the teenagers' "violent attack" on Kelyan left him with "little chance of survival".

She said the CCTV evidence of the defendants on the bus left them with little choice but to plead guilty, adding: "I hope their sentences provide some degree of comfort to Kelyan's friends and family."

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