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Manchester Arena attack: Bomber Salman Abedi was 'badly behaved' and 'extremely rude' at school, headteacher tells inquiry

Salman Abedi was "badly behaved from the start of his school career" and "extremely rude", said Ian Fenn, who led staff at Burnage Academy for Boys in Manchester.

Salman Abedi killed 22 innocent people
Image: Salman Abedi killed 22 innocent people
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The Manchester Arena bomber swore at school teachers, stole a mobile phone from a prefect and skipped class, his former headteacher has revealed.

Salman Abedi was "badly behaved from the start of his school career" and "extremely rude", said Ian Fenn, who led staff at Burnage Academy for Boys in Manchester.

One English teacher branded Abedi a "dislikeable boy" who "refused to complete his coursework on time", the inquiry into the bombing heard.

Ian Fenn, head teacher at Burnage Academy for Boys in Manchester, said Salman Abedi was 'badly behaved from the start of his school career'.
Image: Ian Fenn, head teacher at Burnage Academy for Boys

He joined the college on 12 January, 2009, aged 14, after leaving another technical college due to "problems with other boys", Mr Fenn recalled.

He was "just not really engaged or interested in education", and "didn't really bother", it was said.

"School wasn't something that meant much to him," Mr Fenn added.

"It was like he knew he didn't have anything really invested in it."

More on Manchester Bombing

On one occasion after an exam in June 2011, Abedi told a teacher to "f*** off".

He was excluded for four days after stealing the phone from the prefect and "showing no remorse".

FILE - In this May 24, 2017 file photo women cry after placing flowers in a square in central Manchester, Britain, after the suicide attack at an Ariana Grande concert that left more than 20 people dead and many more injured, as it ended on Monday night at the Manchester Arena. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti, File)
Image: Mourners lay flowers in central Manchester after the devastating suicide attack

But while Abedi was "lacklustre" and "lazy", Mr Fenn told of his surprise at the former student being behind the atrocity on 22 May, 2017, after an Ariana Grande concert.

"You don't think someone who's involved in that sort of minor criminality is going to go on and do what he did."

Fellow pupils were also stunned by Abedi's actions, Mr Fenn said.

An IS recruiter called Abdalraouf Abdalllah was "just a clown" when he was also at Burnage College but when Abedi began associating with him after both had left the school, Abedi's behaviour changed, Mr Fenn said.

He started praying five times a day and made offensive comments, including calling people "kuffar" - a derogatory term referring to people who are not Muslim.

Mr Fenn referred to that as "ultra-orthodox" but added that there was "a lot of difference between orthodox and extremist".

BEST QUALITY AVAILABLE Undated handout photo issued by Force for Deterrence in Libya of Hashem Abedi, the brother of Manchester Arena bomber Salman Abedi, who is being extradited to the UK from Libya over his potential role in the 2017 terror attack. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Issue date: Wednesday July 17, 2019. See PA story POLICE Arena. Photo credit should read: Force for Deterrence in Libya/PA Wire..NOTE TO EDITORS: This handout photo may only be used in for editorial reporting purposes for the contemporaneous illustration of events, things or the people in the image or facts mentioned in the caption. Reuse of the picture may require further permission from the copyright holder.
Image: Hashem Abedi, the brother of the Manchester Arena bomber

Meanwhile, Abedi's younger brother, Hashem, who helped build the bomb used in the attack, was described as "disruptive".

He was placed in a special inclusion unit at the school, which serves the inner-city areas of Longsight, Rusholme, Levenshulme and Moss Side, when he was in year nine.

"He was clever enough to access a main stream curriculum, but he wasn't accessing it and was stopping other people accessing it," Mr Fenn said.

"Salman was much more badly behaved around the school - bad language, being an idiot, shouting - whereas Hashem was a disruptive element in the classroom."

Salman Abedi left the college on 24 June 2011 - with staff clueless about where he was.

They later learned he had travelled to Libya.

The inquiry earlier heard how the youngest of the 22 victims, Saffie-Rose Roussos, eight, asked "am I going to die" as she was taken to hospital.

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Andrew Roussos tells of his grief

Hundreds were left injured after Salman Abedi detonated a suicide bomb in the arena foyer.

Police officers who carried Saffie out of the building described their desperate search for an ambulance - before realising help was not coming "any time soon".

One hero care worker stayed with an injured man for almost an hour, holding a tourniquet, while he waited for a paramedic.