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Yemen billionaire's son reportedly admits involvement in London rape, murder of Norwegian student 15 years ago

Farouk Abdulhak, the son of a Yemeni billionaire, reportedly admitted to being involved in the 2008 rape and murder of 23-year-old Martine Vik Magnussen in London 15 years ago.

The son of a Yemeni billionaire who fled the United Kingdom 15 years ago reportedly admitted to his involvement in the 2008 murder and rape of a Norwegian fellow student in London. 

The BBC reported that Farouk Abdulhak recently admitted to his involvement in the March 14, 2008, death of 23-year-old Martine Vik Magnussen. 

The two were students at Regent's Business School in London at the time. During thousands of texts and hundreds of voice notes to BBC News Arabic special correspondent Nawal Al-Maghafi, Abdulhak allegedly claimed Magnussen, without mentioning her by name, died as a result of a "sex accident gone wrong."

"I did something when I was younger, it was a mistake," he reportedly wrote. 

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However, a coroner’s report detailed how violently Magnussen died, and Abdulhak remains wanted for murder by London’s Metropolitan Police Service.

The report stated her body had 43 cuts and grazes, "many of them typical of assault type injuries or those received in a struggle." The Norwegian student died due to "compression to the neck" which "could mean she was strangled, held down or smothered," the coroner wrote.

Magnussen’s father, Odd Petter Magnussen, reacted to MailOnline about Abdulhak’s admission. 

"It's a gamechanger. He's no longer a suspect, he's now a killer," the grieving father said. "That changes the whole perspective in Yemen from a political point of view and with regards to his family, who may now be able to put more pressure on him."

The United Kingdom holds no extradition treaty with Yemen. 

"I've been talking to both the legally elected government and the Houthi movement, who control the area where he is residing," the father said. "We've had a dialogue with them for the last one and a half years, and they've managed to pinpoint a possible solution within a year."

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"Absolutely, this is a burden for Yemen. The fact that he's admitting his involvement means he is, by definition, a murderer," he added. "It takes a lot more political courage to defend protecting a murderer and a rapist. So, I think there's a good reason to believe it will happen over the year."

Magnussen’s body was found beneath rubble in a basement on Great Portland Street in March 2008. 

Abdulhak and Magnussen had been celebrating the end of exams. 

Magnussen was last seen alive by friends in the early morning hours of March 14, 2008, at the exclusive Maddox nightclub in the Mayfair section of London. 

Those friends claim Abdulhak offered to host an after party at his apartment on Great Portland Street in Westminster. They declined, but Magnussen wanted to continue partying. 

Security camera footage shows Magnussen and Abdulhak leave the club together just before 3 a.m. The BBC reported that Magnussen would be dead before sunrise, but her body was not found in the basement for another 48 hours. In the meantime, Abdulhak hopped on a flight to Cairo, where he then flew by his father’s private jet to Yemen. 

Abdulhak is the son of Shaher Abdulhak, a billionaire businessman who was known as the "King of Sugar" in Yemen and a close friend of former Yemeni president Ali Abdullah Saleh. 

The elder Abdulhak reportedly died from cancer in October 2020 in Germany and was buried in Egypt. 

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