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Aged
, 24,
Hounslow, London.
d. 7 July, 2005,
Liverpool Street/ Aldgate Circle line train, London. |
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London was meant to be a place of refuge where Atique Sharifi
could put behind him the atrocities of his homeland. The young
Afghan national was one of the few members of his family to escape
death at the hands of the Taleban. But three years after fleeing
Kabul, the 24-year-old Muslim was killed by a suicide bomber on a
Piccadilly Line train at Russell
Square. A resident of Hounslow in west London, Mr Sharifi had been
studying English at West Thames College since September 2002,
where he drew praise from staff. He worked in a pizza take-away in
his spare time to send money back to his younger sister still in
Afghanistan, his tutor Harminder Ubhie said. Their mother and
father had died during the Kabul War, she said. Ms Ubhie described
Mr Sharifi as a highly-motivated student who always made the
others laugh. College tutor Harminder Ubhie "He was a delight to
have in the group," she said. "From the first month I knew I could
push this student. I knew he would be one of our high achievers.
"I admired him for his dedication to come to my classes. He said
it was because I was an excellent teacher and he was learning so
much." He had a "youthful and energetic nature" and helped new
members of the group to settle in, she said. College principal
Thalia Marriott said it was a "deep irony" that Mr Sharifi had
left his native Afghanistan to seek safety in the UK "only to find
his fate at the hands of extremists here". The dedicated young man
was clearly going to make a success of life in the UK, she added.
Afghan president Hamid Karzai paid tribute to Mr Sharifi when he
visited the memorial garden at King's Cross station, laying a
floral tribute of white roses and standing in silence.
Courtesy of
BBC

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