Chilling question before Sydney woman tried to drown children

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Kat Wong

“Do you want to go to heaven?”

It was the last question a young girl heard before she was thrown into a river wearing her princess dress and school shoes.

She had been standing on a bridge over the Georges River in Sydney’s south-west with another girl in September 2023 when Hoda Elabady posed the query, according to court documents.

Hoda Elabady at court on Tuesday.AAP

“No, I have a bright future,” the child replied, revealing her dream to be a police officer when she grows up.

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Elabady then picked her up and threw her into the water 1.8 metres below the bridge, a court was told.

The 39-year-old then asked the second girl whether she wanted to “go to God” before also throwing her from the bridge.

She faced a NSW District Court on Wednesday after pleading not guilty to two counts of attempting to drown the girls with intent to murder.

Elabady could not be held responsible for her actions due to her severe mental illness, her lawyer previously argued.

She lives with schizophrenia and was experiencing acute psychosis, which involved hallucinations telling her to kill the girls and die by suicide.

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Elabady had watched from above, anger plastered on her face, as the two girls struggled to remain above the water, Judge Huw Baker said.

“Please let us back up,” one of the girls yelled.

Instead, the woman attempted to die by suicide, sustaining significant injuries to her legs and lower body, the court was told.

‘(We) recognise the bravery of the two young girls who, for a very terrifying two hours, were in the water.’

Judge Huw Baker

Standing on something submerged in the river, with nothing but a stick to help them stay afloat, the girls hugged each other and tried to signal for help.

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A passer-by finally heard their calls and pulled them from the water before they were taken to hospital, Judge Baker said.

“(We) recognise the bravery of the two young girls who, for a very terrifying two hours, were in the water in the Georges River in what can only be described as the most horrific and terrifying circumstances,” he said.

The judge found Elabady had tried to drown the children but could not be held criminally responsible for her actions because of her mental illnesses.

She is believed to have been living with an untreated mental impairment since she was 17 years old, according to mental health experts cited in court.

Elabady’s mental health deteriorated in the months before the incident, the court was told.

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She began telling others she had been talking with an angel and one day said the “evil touched me” before revealing a mark on her thigh.

One of the specialists had “absolute medical confidence” she did not know what she had done was wrong, Judge Baker noted.

She currently shows no overt symptoms of psychosis and, with ongoing treatment, he said she would not pose a risk to herself or the community.

Support is available from Lifeline 13 11 14; Beyond Blue 1800 512 348; Kids Helpline 1800 55 1800; National Domestic Family and Sexual Violence Counselling Service 1800RESPECT (1800 737 732).

AAP

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Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: www.smh.com.au