Raul Nicolaie was one of the two people killed in London on Sunday night as violence in the city continues to spiral
London's plague of violence continued as the stabbings of a young father and a woman in her 30s took the capital's murder toll to 59 this year.
Raul Nicolaie, 26, has been named locally as the man stabbed to death in Colindale, north London at around 6pm yesterday.
His death came just half an hour before a woman was stabbed to death in family row in Brixton, according to neighbours.
Paramedics and air ambulance crews treated Mr Nicolaie before he was taken to hospital in central London but died later in the evening.
Friends told the Evening Standard the Romanian, who came to Britain around five years ago, leaves behind a six-month-old son, who he adored.
A woman in her 20s, who knew the victim, has been arrested on suspicion of murder.
In the second incident, a woman in her 30s was stabbed to death in Brixton, south London, shortly after 6.30pm.
The attack took place and the woman died inside the suspected killer's family home, according to shocked neighbours. The attack occurred on Sudbourne Grove, where houses sell up to £1,325,000.
It comes after wave of fatal stabbings and shootings saw London suffer more murders than New York in a single month for the first time.
The use of a blanket stop and search power in suspected violent areas of London has increased fourfold in the last year due to the wave.
A man is led away from the scene in south London where a woman in her 30s was found dead
Forensic officers leave the home in Brixton, south London where the body of a woman has been found by police
London's murder toll neared 60 when two more people died from stabbings
The attack occurred on Sudbourne Grove, where houses sell up to £1,325,000
Metropolitan Police Commissioner Cressida Dick said the force had carried out a considerably increased amount of stop and searches using section 60 orders since she took over a year ago.
The power, which allows officers to search anybody within a defined area where police believe there is a risk of violence, has been used 106 times in London in the last year, up from 23 in the previous 12 months.
Home Secretary Amber Rudd came under fire earlier this month for presiding over cuts to police officer numbers - but she insisted it played no part in London murder wave.
The Home Secretary unveiled a strategy which demands social media companies do more to crack down on videos glorifying violence.
But critics have said police numbers have fallen under her and Theresa May's watch - leaving forces unable to cope with the rising tide of violence.
In the latest attack, a man in his 20s has been arrested on suspicion of murder and is in custody at a south London police station. It is believed the victim and suspect were known to each other.
The woman was found with stab wounds and, despite the efforts of paramedics, was pronounced dead at the scene.
Officers from the Homicide and Major Crime Command have been informed, and a crime scene is in place.Neighbours claim the victim was killed in a domestic row.
Forensic officers were pictured at the home in Brixton, where they examined the scene
Talk Radio presenter Cristo Foufas, who lives nearby, told reporters that up to 14 emergency service vehicles attended the scene.
A young man thought to be related to the arrested suspect spoke to detectives this afternoon and declined to comment on the incident.
Mr Foufas said: 'I've never seen anything like this happen in this street before and it is worrying and quite sad that this has happened.
'It's really worrying that there's someone who is prepared to kill someone with a knife a few doors up from a primary school.'
Mr Foufas added to The Sun: 'I saw a suspect being led away in handcuffs. The police said the incident took place behind closed doors.'
The two deaths bring the number of murders in London so far this year, where the Metropolitan Police haves publicly released details, to around 59.
February marked the first month in history books that London had more murders than the New York with a total of 15 homicides. Out of the 15 killed, nine were aged 30 or younger.
According to a report by the Sunday Times, New York City's murder statistics have decreased by 87 per cent since the 1990s.
Police have taped off a scene in Brixton, south London where a woman was killed on Sunday night
Police are treating the fatal attack in Brixton as a domestic incident and have arrested a man
Mr Nicolaie was found with stab wounds in this street in north London. He died in hospital
Meanwhile, London's rate has grown by nearly 40 per cent in just three years, not including deaths caused by terrorist attacks.
A spokesman for the Metropolitan Police said of yesterday's Brixton attack: 'A woman, believed to be aged in her 30s, was found suffering from stab wounds. Despite the efforts of paramedics she was pronounced dead at the scene.
'Next of kin have been informed. Formal identification and a post-mortem examination will be arranged in due course.
'A man aged in his 20s has been arrested on suspicion of murder. He is in custody at a south London police station. It is believed the victim and the man arrested were known to each other.'
In a statement on the Colindale attack, the Met said: 'We await formal identification. A post-mortem will be scheduled in due course.
'The victim and the suspect are known to each other. Enquiries are ongoing.
'A 34-year-old woman was arrested at the scene on suspicion of murder. She was taken to a north London police station where she remains in custody at this time.'
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