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Parents who caused death of buried boy jailed | Parents who caused death of buried boy jailed |
(32 minutes later) | |
Both defendants had denied the charges at Coventry Crown Court | Both defendants had denied the charges at Coventry Crown Court |
A couple whose severely malnourished son's body was found buried in the garden of their former home have been jailed. | A couple whose severely malnourished son's body was found buried in the garden of their former home have been jailed. |
Three-year-old Abiyah's body was found behind a house in Birmingham, nine months after Tai and Naiyahmi Yasharahyalah's, 42 and 43, had been evicted from the property. | Three-year-old Abiyah's body was found behind a house in Birmingham, nine months after Tai and Naiyahmi Yasharahyalah's, 42 and 43, had been evicted from the property. |
Last week, the pair were were found guilty of causing the death of Abiyah, whose body was found at the house in Clarence Road, Handsworth. | Last week, the pair were were found guilty of causing the death of Abiyah, whose body was found at the house in Clarence Road, Handsworth. |
Tai Yasharahyalah was jailed for 24-and-a-half years and Naiyahmi Yasharahyalah was given 19-and-a-half years at Coventry Crown Court on Thursday. | Tai Yasharahyalah was jailed for 24-and-a-half years and Naiyahmi Yasharahyalah was given 19-and-a-half years at Coventry Crown Court on Thursday. |
During an eight-week trial, the court heard that the couple lived off grid and created their own bespoke belief system based on a mixture of elements that drew from New Age mysticism and West African religion. | During an eight-week trial, the court heard that the couple lived off grid and created their own bespoke belief system based on a mixture of elements that drew from New Age mysticism and West African religion. |
Abiyah Yasharahyalah would have been about three years and nine months old when he died | Abiyah Yasharahyalah would have been about three years and nine months old when he died |
After the death of Abiyah, they kept his body inside their home for eight days, before embalming the body using frankincense and myrrh prior to a ritualistic burial in their garden. | After the death of Abiyah, they kept his body inside their home for eight days, before embalming the body using frankincense and myrrh prior to a ritualistic burial in their garden. |
Sentencing, Mr Justice Wall their son died "as a result of your wilful neglect of him." | Sentencing, Mr Justice Wall their son died "as a result of your wilful neglect of him." |
He said the three-year-old had a "catalogue of injury and disease" at the time of his death. | He said the three-year-old had a "catalogue of injury and disease" at the time of his death. |
The couple heard that the judge believed they both realised how unwell their son was prior to his death. | |
"I am sure that each of you played a part in starving him and failing to get medical care for him when the need for it was obvious to you," he said. | |
"When Abiyah died you did not call an ambulance or seek any medical assistance in the hope that his life could be saved. | |
"Instead you took his body into the back garden and there buried it." | |
During the sentencing hearing, the court heard that Tai Yasharahyalah had been attacked twice in the week since he was imprisoned after being found guilty, including an assault in a holding cell while on his way to Thursday's hearing. | |
Tai and Naiyahmi Yasharahyalah were arrested at a caravan in Somerset | Tai and Naiyahmi Yasharahyalah were arrested at a caravan in Somerset |
During the trial, jurors were told the couple were evicted from their Birmingham home in March 2022 before police found their son's body in December that year. | |
After he was exhumed, Abiyah was found to have been in a severely malnourished state and suffered from a list of other health problems at the time of his death. | After he was exhumed, Abiyah was found to have been in a severely malnourished state and suffered from a list of other health problems at the time of his death. |
These included bone fractures, rickets, anaemia, stunted growth and severe dental decay. | These included bone fractures, rickets, anaemia, stunted growth and severe dental decay. |
Post-mortem tests failed to ascertain the cause of Abiyah's death, but experts were able to say that if the three-year-old died from a respiratory illness, as described by his parents, the effects of malnutrition would have been a "more than minimal" cause of his death. | Post-mortem tests failed to ascertain the cause of Abiyah's death, but experts were able to say that if the three-year-old died from a respiratory illness, as described by his parents, the effects of malnutrition would have been a "more than minimal" cause of his death. |
Both parents had denied neglect, causing or allowing the death of a child and perverting the course of justice. | Both parents had denied neglect, causing or allowing the death of a child and perverting the course of justice. |
The Kingdom of Yasharahyalah | |
A sign on the front door of their couple's home in Handsworth, Birmingham | |
During the trial, the court heard that Tai Yasharahyalah had styled himself as the head of a fictional country for which the couple made their own passports. | |
The couple claimed to have renounced their citizenship and he was called "King" by his wife and her family for a period of time. | |
Tai Yasharahyalah, a former medical genetics student before quitting the field, invented his own laws, and claimed to have established his own kingdom. | |
Their beliefs saw them eat a restrictive vegan diet, which saw all members of the family fall into a state of malnutrition. | |
Mr Justice Wall said the couple cared more about their beliefs than the welfare of their child. | |
"Your motivation for acting as you did was your prioritisation of your distorted system of beliefs over their welfare," he said. | |
"You were prepared to live with any consequences which flowed from your adherence to these beliefs, including the disability or death of the children." | |
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