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Matais alleged victim denies provoking attack but says he had no intention of harming woman
The trial at the Australian High Court in Victoria has begun and, in a major blow to the Muslim community, a woman who allegedly threatened to kill another woman and was killed in a violent outburst of anger has been found not guilty of murdering a Muslim woman.
Tuliam Anees was charged in June with premeditated murder, attempted premeditated murder and manslaughter but that charge was ultimately dismissed.
Last month a New South Wales Supreme Court judge found that Ms Anees, of the city of Brisbane, should be declared the "person who did it to that woman". The woman's husband had accused her of threatening him and his wife with her husband and son at a party.
It is the largest assault trial of its kind in the country, with more than 150 charges levelled against the accused. The woman alleged she suffered a physical assault after she had a drink with a friend after the friends went to a restaurant, and she allegedly made derogatory statements about the Muslim woman, who was wearing a hijab.
The accused denied the allegations, saying that the woman had punched him in the stomach after a dispute but was not involved in the attack.
The alleged victim's lawyer said her client was under psychiatric care for more than three years before his arrest last September.
The woman's brother, Mr Muhammad, who was in court for the proceedings said the evidence against the accused "makes it more difficult for us to believe that he killed any of the other women that were with her".
"She was not suicidal," he said.
Mr Muhammad said that as the case developed, the alleged victim and 바카라 her father approached the accused on two occasions to tell him they were victims of abuse. The couple had a daughter, and the accused said he could not allow them to be "taken advantage of or left behind".
When they confronted the accused, they were told, according to the lawyer, that his clients feared for their lives.
Mr Muhammad said that the accused had been suffering from depression since the alleged victim murdered her and had been diagnosed with a mental illness.
"Tuliam is not a violent, dangerous man. He's not a violent man," he said. "He's not dangerous, a violent man. We respect you as an individual to be able to fight this off, that's for sure.