BBC News, Yorkshire

A man who murdered his wife in a “persistent and frenzied” attack at their home in West Yorkshire has been jailed for life.
Wahib Albaradan murdered Salam Alshara, 27, at the house on Dearnley Street, Dewsbury, on 19 November 2023 following an argument.
The 37-year-old used three bladed weapons to cause the mother-of-four at least 20 injuries, Leeds Crown Court heard.
Albaradan spent more than a year denying he had murdered his partner, admitting the killing on the day his trial was due to begin.
He was told he would serve a minimum jail term of 19 years and six months.
The prosecution said a full baby bottle found at the point where the attack started suggested she had been feeding their baby when Albaradan attacked her.
Judge Guy Kearl KC, the Recorder of Leeds, said: “You were a jealous and controlling husband who bullied, threatened and manipulated her as a result of that jealousy.”

Albaradan fled after the murder and discarded two kitchen knives and a razor blade, the court heard, with the weapons never recovered.
He removed all methods of phoning for help at the property before leaving, the sentencing was told.
He was arrested in the early hours of the following morning after a large police manhunt.
Judge Kearl said Albaradan had been diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia, but this did not substantially impair his understanding of what he was doing.
He became increasingly paranoid that Ms Alshara was talking to other men and disapproved of her installing messaging apps on her phone, the court was told.
Albaradan arrived in the UK from Syria in 2020, with Ms Alshara and their children arriving the following year.
The judge described the attack as “prolonged, persistent and frenzied”.

The couple’s neighbour said Albaradan was “always there, leaning over her all the time, hovering over her”, the sentencing heard.
In a message to her brother, read out in court, Ms Alshara said: “I told [Albaradan] I don’t want this life, full of suspicion and mistrust.
“If you want to live with me, I want to be treated like any other woman.”
Her brother said Albaradan would call her every 15 minutes and constantly track her movements.