A Prison van escorted by police arrives at The Queen Elizabeth II Law Courts in Liverpool, north west England on January 23, 2025, ahead of the sentencing Southport attacker Axel Rudakubana. (Photo by Darren Staples / AFP)
Liverpool: A UK teenager who murdered three young girls in a stabbing spree last year that sparked the country's worst riots in over a decade was Thursday ordered out of court by a judge for disrupting the start of his sentencing.
After arriving in court Axel Rudakubana, 18, turned to a dock officer and said, "I'm not fine, I feel ill", urging the judge "don't continue".
"I need to speak to a paramedic, I feel ill," he shouted repeatedly.
"You're not giving me any support, judge, I feel ill," he said, adding he had not eaten for 10 days.
Minutes earlier, various media reported that he had been taken to hospital in the early hours, although this was not confirmed, and the judge told the court he had been assured Rudakubana was fine to attend.
Rudakubana pleaded guilty on Monday to the killings at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class in Southport, northwest England.
As the hearing got under way, the court was told he had said "I'm glad they're dead" as he was held in a custody suite after killing the three girls last July.
Rudakubana has also pleaded guilty to 10 counts of attempted murder and possessing a blade.
And he admitted producing a biological toxin -- ricin -- and possessing an Al-Qaeda training manual.
Judge Julian Goose warned Rudakubana after his guilty pleas that he faced a long custodial sentence.
Rudakubana's multiple appearances in court to date have been marked by his uncooperative behaviour, repeatedly refusing to speak and declining to stand in court on Monday, where he muttered "guilty" to each of the charges.
The teenager's rampage shocked people in the UK.
Viral misinformation that the perpetrator was a Muslim asylum seeker triggered anti-immigrant riots in more than a dozen English and Northern Irish towns and cities.
Rudakubana was in fact born in Cardiff to parents of Rwandan origin, and lived in Banks, a village northeast of Southport.
His Christian church-going parents, both ethnic Tutsis, came to Britain in the years after the 1994 Rwandan genocide, according to UK media.
The attack has not been treated as a terror incident and he was never charged with terrorism offences -- prompting criticism from some.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer vowed on Tuesday to update terror legislation "if the law needs to change", to recognise what he called the new threat of individuals intent on "extreme violence, seemingly for its own sake".
Meanwhile, interior minister Yvette Cooper announced a public inquiry would probe how police, courts and welfare services "failed to identify the terrible risk and danger to others that he posed".