An asylum seeker who stabbed six people, including a police officer at the Glasgow hotel, where he was housed for free, was named Badreddin Abadlla Adam.
“The man who died after being shot by armed officers during the incident on West George Street, Glasgow, on Friday June 26, can now be named as Badreddin Abadlla Adam, 28, of Sudan. The identity is based on information that the deceased provided to the Home Office earlier this year, ”Police Scotland explained in an official statement.
“Scottish police will continue to investigate the circumstances surrounding the incident in Glasgow. Police discharge of firearms resulting in death will also continue to be fully investigated by the Police Investigation and Review Commissioner (PIRC), ”the statement added.
“Both consultations, taking place under the direction of the Lord Advocate, are ongoing and it would not be appropriate to speculate on the events or the results of these investigations.”
The Lord Advocate, currently James Wolffe QC, is the Chief Law Officer in Scotland, who maintained his own independent legal system after the Treaty of Union with England in 1707.
First photo of Glasgow knife attacker Badradeen Abadlla Adam @skynews pic.twitter.com/d0NPJsUk3M
– James Matthews (@jamesmatthewsky) June 28, 2020
Asylum seekers in Glasgow were transferred to the Park Inn by Radisson and other hotels with the start of the national coronavirus blockade. The taxpayer-funded spending money provided to them was reduced after the move, due to the fact that hotels were providing internet access, three free meals a day, and a laundry service, among other services.
So-called “rights activists” say immigrants, whose asylum claims are allegedly based on lack of security in their home countries, and presumably the many safe countries that many will have passed on their way to Great Brittany were not happy with the arrangements, however.
For example, Ako Zada, from the Kurdish Community of Scotland, claimed that Abadlla Adam had complained of being “very hungry” before her attack, adding that asylum seekers at the hotel “fed three times a day, but people complained about having the same spaghetti and macaroni and cheese all the time. It was not culturally appropriate for them. “
Migrants were also reported to be unhappy with “limited WiFi” at the hotel.
“[T]They were fed three times a day, but people complained about having the same spaghetti and macaroni and cheese all the time. It was not culturally appropriate for them, “said Scottish Kurdish Community activist Ako Zada. Https://t.co/uFjJ9zGfJh
– Breitbart London (@BreitbartLondon) June 27, 2020