Man jailed for three and a half years for punching female police officers at Manchester Airport
Quick Look
- Mohammed Fahir Amaaz, 21, from Rochdale, has been jailed for three and a half years after assaulting two female police officers, PC Lydia Ward and PC Ellie Cook, and a Starbucks customer at Manchester Airport in July 2024.
- The officers sustained injuries, with Ward suffering a broken nose.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
Mohammed Fahir Amaaz was jailed for assaulting two female police officers and a Starbucks customer at Manchester Airport. The incident involved Amaaz headbutting a customer and then punching the officers who attempted to arrest him.
A man who punched two female police officers at Manchester Airport as they tried to arrest him for headbutting a man in a Starbucks cafe has been jailed for three and a half years.
Mohammed Fahir Amaaz, 21, from Rochdale, was convicted at Liverpool Crown Court last year of assaulting PC Lydia Ward, PC Ellie Cook and a Starbucks customer at the airport in July 2024.
Sentencing had been delayed for a re-trial on additional charges that Amaaz had also assaulted a male police officer - PC Zachary Marsden - but the jury again failed to reach a decision and he was cleared.
In a statement read to the court earlier Ward, whose nose was broken in the attack, said: "What you did was cowardly."
Judge Neil Flewitt KC, passing sentence, told Amaaz he was the "aggressor" and said both assaults were "prolonged and unprovoked".
The court heard the fracas, outside Terminal 2, was recorded in footage widely circulated on social media.
It had initially sparked protests against the police after a short clip showed Marsden appearing to kick Amaaz in the head while he was on the ground.
The court heard that officer is facing an investigation from the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC), although the watchdog declined to comment further.
CCTV footage was later leaked to the media showing events leading up to the arrest, including Amaaz punching Ward and Cook to the ground.
Ward, who has since been promoted to sergeant, took to the witness stand and told Amaaz: "Take away that I am a police officer. Look at me, standing here.
"What do you see? I'll tell you what you see. You see a female. A female who is 5ft2 and at the time of the incident I weighed no more than eight stone.
"You are a male and you chose to attack me without a second thought. You chose to attack a female. You knocked me to the ground with one punch, with so much force you broke my nose."
Cook's statement, read by prosecutor Paul Greaney KC, revealed that the trauma of the incident had led her to give up being a firearms officer.
"Each of our faces were plastered all over national news," she said.
"Everyone knew who we were. I had to move out of my home, a home where I felt safe and secure. For what? For doing my job?"
The officers had responded to reports that a male fitting Amaaz's description had headbutted the Starbucks customer, Abdulkareem Ismaeil, minutes earlier on 23 July 2024.
Prosecutors said Amaaz resisted their attempts to take him outside and he went on to use a "high level of violence".
Cook's statement described her feeling "excruciating pain with each blow".
The officer she was still physically suffering, and has "shooting pains" in her jaw whenever she yawns, along with regular headaches and problems with sleeping.
What to Watch
AI outlook — possibilities, not facts
The Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) will conclude its investigation into PC Zachary Marsden's actions.
Likely · Within months
Open Questions
- What will be the outcome of the IOPC investigation into PC Zachary Marsden?
- Will there be further public protests related to the incident?




