London Police Arrest Afghan Asylum Seeker After Fatal Stabbing; No Terror Motive Found
A stabbing in West London left one dead and two injured; police arrested an Afghan asylum seeker, ruling out terrorism.
A 49-year-old dog walker, identified as Wayne Broadhurst, was fatally stabbed in a brutal triple attack on Midhurst Gardens in Uxbridge, west London, on Monday, October 27, 2025, around 5 p.m., prompting a rapid police response that ended with the tasering and arrest of a 22-year-old Afghan national suspect. Broadhurst, a local binman described by neighbors as "the last person you'd think would be attacked," reportedly intervened in a dispute—possibly involving the suspect as a lodger in one victim's home—only to be slashed across the neck and stabbed repeatedly. A 45-year-old man, believed to be the boy's father, suffered life-changing injuries, while the 14-year-old boy sustained non-life-threatening wounds; all were rushed to hospital by London's Air Ambulance and paramedics.
CCTV footage captured the dramatic arrest: the suspect, knife in hand and covered in blood, strolled casually down the street before two officers sprinted after him, yelling "drop the knife" and "get on the floor," deploying a Taser that felled him amid reinforcements. Charged with murder and attempted murder, the man—confirmed by the Home Office as having entered the UK clandestinely in a lorry in 2020 and granted asylum plus leave to remain in 2022—lived in private accommodation, not government housing, debunking viral claims. Chief Superintendent Jill Horsfall labeled it a "shocking and senseless act of violence," ruling out terrorism while probing victim-suspect links.
The incident has ignited fury on social media and among residents, with floral tributes piling up and vigils held for Broadhurst, as locals decry a "panicked" atmosphere in the once-family-oriented street. It unfolds against heightened anti-immigrant tensions, fuelled by recent assaults linked to asylum hotels and riots, amplifying calls for stricter border controls amid knife crime spikes. Police urged against sharing graphic videos to curb speculation, as forensics combed the scene Tuesday.
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As the murder investigation intensifies, Broadhurst's family receives specialist support, with the Met vowing justice in a community reeling from its "innocent" hero's loss—highlighting raw debates over asylum vetting and public safety in modern Britain.
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