The brother of the Manchester Arena bomber has been found guilty of every charge he faced having helped his sibling commit ISIS-inspired mass murder.
A jury convicted Hashem Abedi, 22, after less than five hours of deliberation at the end of a seven week trial at the Old Bailey in London.
The panel of three women and eight men found Abedi guilty of 22 counts of murder; one count of attempted murder concerning those who were injured but survived the blast; and conspiring with his brother to cause an explosion.
He now faces life in prison.
Hashem Abedi was 2,000 miles away in Libya at the time his brother Salman Abedi detonated a huge bomb in his backpack in the foyer of Manchester Arena as mainly young concert-goers were leaving an Ariana Grande pop concert on the evening of May 22, 2017.
Salman Abedi, then 22, killed himself and 22 others in the blast, the youngest of them aged eight, and injured hundreds more, leaving 92 of them with life-long injuries.
In March, Abedi was convicted of murdering the 22 victims of the Manchester Arena bombing, the attempted murder of those who survived, and conspiracy to cause an explosion