TikToker's murder sentence 'should be reduced'

Woman with long brown hair in a car wearing a hoodie.Image source, Other
Image caption,

The length of prison time given to Mahek Bukhari has been described as "wholly disproportionate" by barristers representing her

  • Published

A TikTok influencer who murdered her mother's lover and his friend in a high-speed car chase should have her sentence reduced as it is "wholly disproportionate", the Court of Appeal has heard.

Mahek Bukhari was jailed for a minimum of 31 years for her involvement in the murders of Saqib Hussain and Hashim Ijazuddin in February 2022.

Her mother, Ansreen Bukhari, was also convicted and imprisoned for at least 26 years.

Barristers for Mahek Bukhari, from Stoke-on-Trent, said her sentence should be reduced as it did not reflect that Mr Hussain had demonstrated "controlling behaviour" towards her mother in the hours before the killing.

Mohammed Hashim Ijazuddin (left) and Saqib HussainImage source, Leicestershire Police
Image caption,

Hashim Ijazuddin (left) and Saqib Hussain, both from Banbury, died at the scene

Their trial at Leicester Crown Court heard the murders followed Ansreen's unsuccessful attempts to break off her affair with Mr Hussain, who had threatened to release sexually explicit material of her if she did not pay him £3,000.

Prosecutors claimed Mr Hussain and Mr Ijazuddin, both 21 and from Banbury in Oxfordshire, were "lured" to "one last meeting" with the Bukharis in a Tesco car park in Hamilton, Leicester, under the pretence of returning the money.

But the Bukharis and others ambushed the pair, chasing Mr Ijazuddin's Skoda along the A46 in Leicester in two vehicles, deliberately ramming them off the road, the trial heard.

Two others were also convicted of the murders, with a further three found guilty of two counts of manslaughter.

Headshots of Mahek and Ansreen Bukhari side by side.Image source, Leicestershire Police
Image caption,

Mahek's mother Ansreen Bukhari (right) was also convicted and imprisoned for at least 26 years

Christopher Millington KC, for Mahek, who was 24 at the time of her sentencing, said Mr Hussain threatened to release the sexually explicit material, which was "the end of a very long series of threatening messages".

This had a "very direct evidential bearing" on the Bukharis' decision to travel to Leicester to meet Mr Hussain, Mr Millington said.

He said: "None of this, we submit, was reflected in the fixing of the minimum term as it should have been."

Mr Millington also said the killing was in the "heat of the moment, rather than cold-blooded murder" and told the hearing in London that Mahek's age and "lack of maturity" also should have led to a shorter sentence.

"One has been left with a term that is wholly disproportionate," he said.

Media caption,

Watch: Police video shows the moments leading up to the crash

After the car chase began, Mr Hussain told police in a 999 call moments before his death that his and Mr Ijazuddin's car was being "rammed off the road" by assailants.

Analysis by forensic collision investigators showed that one of the cars involved in the chase reached speeds of up to 100mph.

In sentencing, Judge Timothy Spencer KC said Mahek's "tawdry fame" as a social media influencer made her "utterly self-obsessed" and "oblivious to the damage you do".

Collingwood Thompson KC, for the Crown Prosecution Service, acknowledged at the hearing on Friday that blackmail by Mr Hussain "undoubtedly existed" and was "relevant", but said the sentence should not be reduced.

"The fact is that the appellant did contemplate with her mother going to the police, and if they had gone to the police, none of this would have happened," he said.

Lord Justice Warby, Mr Justice Lavender and Judge Sylvia De Bertodano will give their judgement in writing at a later date.

Get in touch

Tell us which stories we should cover in Leicester

Follow BBC Leicester on Facebook, external, on X, external, or on Instagram, external. Send your story ideas to eastmidsnews@bbc.co.uk, external or via WhatsApp, external on 0808 100 2210.

Related topics

More on this story

Related internet links