A manhunt for the suspect in a
corrosive-substance attack on a mother and her daughters in Clapham is
continuing, after he was last seen on the London Underground at King's Cross.
Police are trying to piece together Abdul
Shokoor Ezedi's movements after he was captured by CCTV at the station.
He was seen boarding a Victoria line train
heading southbound at 21:00 GMT on Wednesday.
The mother, 31, remains "very
poorly" with expected life-changing injuries.
Her daughters, aged three and eight, suffered
injuries not "as serious as first thought" and "not likely to be
life-changing".
The Metropolitan Police confirmed on Saturday
morning there were no developments in the search overnight.
Speaking at a news conference on Friday
afternoon, Metropolitan Police Cdr Jon Savell called on Ezedi - who has very
significant injuries to the right side of his face - to come forward.
"Abdul, you clearly have got some very
significant injuries," Cdr Savell said.
"We've seen the images. You need some
medical help, so do the right thing and hand yourself in."
Images of Ezedi inside King's Cross station,
about 90 minutes after the attack, were released by police on Friday.
Cdr Savell also revealed "significant and
important pieces of evidence" were recovered following search warrants in
east London and Newcastle on Thursday.
Two empty containers labelled with corrosive
warnings were found at an address in Newcastle, and forensic tests are under
way to determine if they held the substance used during the attack.
The wanted man left the Newcastle area in the
early hours before travelling down to the capital, where the attack happened in
Lessar Avenue, Clapham, at 19:25 on Wednesday.
The mother and her two girls were seriously
hurt after the substance was thrown at them, according to initial details.
Three women and a man attempted to stop the
attacker as he fled the scene. He tried to leave in a car, but he collided with
a parked vehicle and then ran on foot towards Clapham Common.
Three members of the public, who came to the
aid of the family, have all been discharged from hospital with minor burns.
Five officers who attended the attack were
also treated and have now left hospital.
Ezedi was later seen at a Tesco in the King's
Cross area before boarding a southbound Victoria Line tube from the area's
underground station at 21:00 on Wednesday.
Ezedi,who is believed to have travelled on a
lorry from Afghanistan in 2016, was convicted of a sexual offence in 2018.
The Crown
Prosecution Service (CPS) said he was sentenced on 9 January 2018 after
pleading guilty to one charge of sexual assault and one of exposure.
He was given a
suspended sentence at Newcastle Crown Court and put on the sex offenders
register for 10 years.
Ezedi was later
granted asylum after two failed attempts. He was allowed to stay in the country
after a priest confirmed he had converted to Christianity.
An asylum seeker can
claim asylum in the UK if they fear religious persecution in their native
country.
It is not yet known
which Christian denomination supported Ezedi's claim.
The Catholic Church
in the North East confirmed Ezedi was part of a justice and peace charitable
project, but has yet to confirm whether he was helped in other ways.
The reporters has
spoken to the owner of a supermarket in Byker, Newcastle, who said he saw Ezedi
in his shop on Tuesday.
"He seemed
normal and relaxed and in general was always respectful and polite. He worked
six or seven days in a pizza shop behind the counter," the shop owner
called Yaya said.
"I was shocked.
He was working hard. In the two years I knew him he never drank.
"A few months
ago he said he was working hard to go back to Afghanistan to get married to a
woman and bring her back to the UK, because he was tired of being single."
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