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Family guilty of allowing murder Family guilty of allowing murder
(30 minutes later)
A family have been found guilty of allowing the death of a young woman in their house in Leeds.A family have been found guilty of allowing the death of a young woman in their house in Leeds.
Sabia Rani, 19, was killed by Shazad Khan after coming to the city from Pakistan. He was jailed for life for her murder in January 2007.Sabia Rani, 19, was killed by Shazad Khan after coming to the city from Pakistan. He was jailed for life for her murder in January 2007.
A jury at Leeds Crown Court heard Ms Rani suffered serious tissue damage after being beaten over several weeks.A jury at Leeds Crown Court heard Ms Rani suffered serious tissue damage after being beaten over several weeks.
Four of Khan's relatives, including his mother, were found guilty of allowing the death of a vulnerable adult.Four of Khan's relatives, including his mother, were found guilty of allowing the death of a vulnerable adult.
They are Khan's mother Phullan Bibi, 52, two of his sisters, Uzma Khan, 23, and Nazia Naureen, 28, and Ms Naureen's husband Majid Hussain, also 28. They are Khan's mother Phullan Bibi, 52, two of his sisters, Uzma Khan, 23, and Nazia Naureen, 28, and her husband Majid Hussain, also 28.
The family all lived in the same house as the couple in Oakwood Grange, Roundhay.
'Evil spirits'
As the verdicts were delivered, the sisters started wailing and hugged each other before screaming: "Not guilty! Not guilty!"
The jury of five men and seven women heard Ms Rani had been in severe pain and very ill in the weeks before her death in May 2006.
Prosecutor Simon Myerson QC said the defendants blamed her injuries on evil spirits and curses.
Khan was jailed for a minimum of 15 years
Ms Rani had been brought up in rural Pakistan and did not speak English.
She came to England five months before she died and was not allowed out of the house without a member of her husband's family.
After her death, pathologist Christopher Milroy described her injuries as being similar to those suffered by someone in a serious road accident.
Mr Myerson told the jury each defendant must have known Ms Rani was in pain and that Khan must have been the cause of this pain.
Judge James Stewart QC will decide later when to sentence the four defendants.