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The Mayor of Croydon, Jason Perry, wrote on X (formerly known as Twitter): “I am devastated to hear that the teenage girl who was stabbed in the town centre this morning has tragically died.
So, at around 8.30am whilst Hassan was walking outside the Whitgift Centre, Elianne took the plastic bag back. “It was a gesture of solidarity with (her friend) that cost Elianne her life.
Hassan Sentamu, 18, had a history of attacking girls and carrying knives before he stabbed the popular schoolgirl in the neck outside the Whitgift Centre in Croydon, south-east London.
The Whitgift Centre is a large shopping centre in the town centre of Croydon, opening in stages between 1968 and 1970. [1] The centre comprises 1,302,444 sq ft (121,001 m 2 ) of retail space, and was the largest covered shopping development in Greater London until the opening of Westfield London at White City in 2008.
Whitgift, East Riding of Yorkshire, a small village near the confluence of the River Ouse and the River Trent, England; John Whitgift, an English archbishop, who founded or gave his name to: the Whitgift Foundation; the Whitgift Almshouses; Whitgift School, an independent school in Croydon; Trinity School of John Whitgift, an independent school ...
The Trinity School of John Whitgift, usually referred to as Trinity School, is a independent boys' day school with a co-educational sixth form, located in Shirley Park, Croydon. Part of the Whitgift Foundation , it was established in 1882 as Whitgift Middle School and was a direct grant grammar school from 1945 until 1968, when it left the scheme.
Elianne was killed during a meeting at the Whitgift Centre to exchange belongings with Sentamu's ex-girlfriend, who was her friend. The court heard he flew into an "explosive rage of savage violence".
Whitgift School was founded in 1596 by the Archbishop of Canterbury John Whitgift and opened in 1600 [4] as part of the Whitgift Foundation which had the aim of building a hospital and school in Croydon for the "poor, needy and impotent people" from the parishes of Croydon and Lambeth. [5]