‘Everyone believes that won’t happen to them until it does’: Zara Aleena told best friend she would not fall victim to killer like Sarah Everard and Sabina Nessa
- A law graduate who told her best friend ‘that won’t happen to us’ after Sarah Everard’s murder was killed by a stranger as she walked home
- Zara Aleena, 35, died from severe head injuries after she was attacked Sunday
- CCTV captured the graduate moments before she was beaten to death in Ilford
A law graduate killed by a stranger as she walked home had reassured her best friend ‘that won’t happen to us’ after Sarah Everard’s murder.
Zara Aleena, 35, died from severe head injuries after she was attacked on her way back from a night out in the early hours of Sunday.
CCTV captured the 5ft 1in University of Westminster graduate walking past a shop to her mother’s house in Ilford, north-east London, moments before she was attacked from behind, dragged into a driveway and beaten to death.
Last night detectives continued to question a 29-year-old man arrested on Monday. Miss Aleena’s devastated best friend drew chilling parallels with the murder of Miss Everard, 33, and Sabina Nessa, 28.
Kind and loving: Law graduate Zara Aleena, pictured left, was killed by a stranger as she walked home and had told her best friend Lisa Hodgson, right, ‘that won’t happen to us’ after Sarah Everard’s murder
Zara Aleena, 35, died from severe head injuries after she was attacked on her way back from a night out in the early hours of Sunday morning
Lisa Hodgson, who studied at Westminster Kingsway College with Miss Aleena, said: ‘We spoke a lot about Sarah Everard together, and Sabina Nessa too. Of course we didn’t know those girls but we were both really affected by it – Zara was quite shaken.
‘I even said to Zara, “Can you imagine something like that happening to us?” And she said, “It’s awful, I know. But don’t worry, it won’t happen to us”. Everyone believes that won’t happen to them until it does.’
Marketing manager Miss Everard was kidnapped, raped and murdered in March last year by Scotland Yard firearms officer Wayne Couzens.
Miss Hodgson said: ‘After what happened to Sarah you would expect to see big changes to prevent it happening again.
‘But what has been done? It has happened again, to my best friend. And I want to kill the man who has done it with my bare hands but it’s too late now, my beautiful, kind and loving friend has gone.
‘These predators out there don’t seem to care – they’re not scared. We should be able to walk home alone at night without being terrified, looking over our shoulders fearful that something like this will happen. Why shouldn’t we feel safe?’
Jebina Nessa, whose sister Sabina was murdered in Kidbrooke, south-east London last September, joined calls for more to be done to end male violence against women.
She said: ‘Words cannot describe how I felt reading yet another murder, similar to what happened to my beautiful sister. My heart goes out to her family.’ It was typical for Miss Aleena, who worked at the Royal Courts of Justice while seeking a trainee solicitor role, to walk rather than take a taxi.
Miss Hodgson said. ‘She was fearless. I spoke to her friend about what happened – they said they got in a cab and Zara wanted to walk. That’s Zara, 100 per cent.’
CCTV given to police but not made public shows her attacker approach from behind, put his hand over her mouth and punch her to the ground, according to neighbours who had seen it.
‘How cowardly, to attack a lone woman from behind. Zara was small but she was tough and brave, she would have fought to the last,’ Miss Hodgson said.
As the attacker fled, neighbours rushed out to find Miss Aleena bleeding. Paramedics performed CPR for two hours and took her to hospital at about 4.30am but she was declared dead shortly afterwards.
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