The trial at Inner London Crown Court heard how he used the drug butanediol to render his victims unconscious, and how he used hidden cameras to record nine of his assaults.
Image: Zhenhao Zou. Pic: Met Police
Image: Zou’s bedroom in his flat in London’s Elephant and Castle. Pic: Met Police
Jurors found him guilty of 11 counts of rape against 10 women between 2019 and 2023. Three of these women were raped in London and seven in China.
Zou was sentenced to 24 years in prison, but because of time served, he will serve at least 22 years and 227 days before being eligible for parole in 2048.
Sentencing Zou at Inner London Crown Court on Thursday, Judge Rosina Cottage told him he was a “very bright man” who used a manipulative “charming mask” to hide that he is a “sexual predator”.
The judge said Zou “planned and executed a campaign of rape”, which had “devastating and long-term effects” on his victims.
She told Zou he treated the women, who were “pieces in an elaborate game” for the defendant, “callously” and as “sex toys” for his own pleasure, adding he has a “sexual interest” in “asserting power and control over women” and has “no understanding of the meaning of consent”.
Image: A camera used to film two alleged rapes which was shown to the jury during the trial. Pic: Met Police/PA
Only two of his victims were identified during the trial. Since Zou’s conviction, police have now identified one of the other victims involved in this case.
The prosecution said Zou embarked on a “campaign of offending of the utmost gravity”.
He targeted young Chinese women, inviting them to his flat for drinks or to study before he drugged and assaulted them.
Zou used hidden cameras or his mobile phone to record the attacks, keeping the footage and sometimes the women’s belongings as souvenirs.
Officers discovered nearly 1,300 videos in one of the biggest cases the Met’s digital forensics lab has ever dealt with.
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3:16
Moment police arrest student guilty of 11 rapes
The rape material the jury had to watch was so graphic that jurors have been excused from jury service for two decades.
During the sentencing hearing, the victim impact statements of three women were read out.
The first said she’d woken up to find the former PhD student raping her in 2021. She said it happened while “unconscious” after being out drinking for four or five hours with friends in London’s Chinatown.
The woman said: “That moment will clearly stay in my mind forever. As a result, I now experience severe physical and psychological distress. The memories trigger migraines, physical pain in the places he violated, and an overwhelming urge to scrub myself clean.
“To this day, I struggle to trust anyone. I avoid new friendships, trapped in the aftermath of what he did.”
Image: Police appeal for victims to come forward. Pic: Met Police
The second victim was raped while “drunk and unconscious” at Zou’s flat in London’s Elephant and Castle in May 2023. Zou filmed the attack and took intimate images without her knowledge using a small camera by the bed.
“No matter what I did, I could not sleep; whenever I closed my eyes, the events of what happened to me kept replaying in my mind,” she said in her statement, outlining her “mental agony and pain”.
“I am not sure anything will help what I have gone through. The only thing I want him to know is that if he does this again, I will do everything in my power to send him back to prison.”
The third woman was unidentified during the trial until she came forward as part of the police appeal. This woman was raped at an unknown location in China, and Zou filmed her rape while she was unconscious.
She told the court: “When I recently saw that face again in the news reports, my trembling body reacted faster than my conscious mind. Now insomnia and anxiety rage anew.
“Reliving this feels like I’m being forced to watch my past self endure repeated violations.”
Image: Police found a bottle of butanediol in Zou’s flat. Pic: Met Police
Image: The trial heard Zou kept a ‘lost property box’ full of women’s belongings. Pic: Met Police
Zou is currently at the heart of the UK’s largest rape investigation. Following Zou’s conviction, investigators shared that they believed Zou’s offending was on a much larger scale than the 11 rape convictions.
Metropolitan Police detectives believe Zou could be the “most substantial and prolific offender we’ve come across in recent times”.
Officers believe more than 50 other women could also be victims of Zou, which would make him one of the worst sex offenders the UK has ever seen.
Investigators have further video material showing unidentified women being attacked, and police believe around 25 of those incidents happened in the UK and 25 in China.
Image: Among the items Zou kept was this dress. Pic: Met Police
It’s understood that some of these women form part of the 50 additional women that police say have also been targeted by the former University College London student.
Police are particularly keen to hear from women from the Chinese student community who may have met Zou and were living in and around London between 2019 and 2024.
Following the sentencing, the Metropolitan Police said the reports made by 24 women “continue to be investigated thoroughly by a dedicated team of officers” and the force “will continue to liaise with the Crown Prosecution Service around potential future charges”.
“The lengthy sentence reflects justice for the women who are victim-survivors of Zou and is testament to the extraordinary lengths gone to by investigators, who left no stone unturned in their pursuit to take a dangerous sexual predator off the streets,” Met Police said in a statement.
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Police question student rapist
Commander Kevin Southworth said: “First and foremost, our thoughts have always been with the courageous victim-survivors of Zou’s heinous and predatory crimes.”
He added: “I hope the fact Zou can no longer harm others serves as a small amount of comfort to the women who have suffered immeasurably.”
Image: Zou during a police interrogation
Saira Pike, of the Crown Prosecution Service, said Zou “is a serial rapist and a danger to women”, adding that his life sentence was reflecting “the heinous acts and harm he caused to women and the danger he posed to society”.
Zou first moved to Belfast in 2017 to study mechanical engineering at Queen’s University before moving to London in 2019.
He then studied for a Master’s degree at University College London from 2019 to 2021, followed by a PhD at the same university from 2021.
Police say “investigators have not received any reports from women who met Zou while he was living in Belfast but remain in contact with Police Service Northern Ireland”, but that anyone with concerns should come forward.
Labour MP Kim Leadbeater, who proposed the legislation, was seen crying in the chamber as it went through.
Campaign group Dignity in Dying hailed the result as “a landmark moment for choice, compassion and dignity at the end of life”.
“MPs have listened to dying people, to bereaved families and to the public, and have voted decisively for the reform that our country needs and deserves,” said Sarah Wootton, its chief executive.
The bill will now go to the House of Lords, where it will face further scrutiny before becoming law.
Due to a four-year “backstop” added to the bill, it could be 2029 before assisted dying is actually offered, potentially coinciding with the end of this government’s parliament.
The bill would allow terminally ill adults with fewer than six months to live to apply for an assisted death, subject to approval by two doctors and a panel featuring a social worker, senior legal figure and psychiatrist.
Image: Campaigners with Dignity in Dying protest in favour of the assisted dying bill. Pic: PA
Ms Leadbeater has always insisted her legislation would have the most robust safeguards of any assisted dying laws in the world.
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MP: ‘Surreal’ moment as assisted dying passes Commons
Opening the debate on Friday she said that opposing the bill “is not a neutral act. It is a vote for the status quo”.
She warned that if her plan was rejected, MPs would be asked to vote on it again in 10 years and “that fills me with despair”.
MPs have brought about historic societal change
A chain of events that started with the brutal murder of an MP almost 10 years ago has today led to historic societal change – the like of which many of us will never see again.
Assisted dying will be legalised in England and Wales. In four years’ time adults with six months or less to live and who can prove their mental capacity will be allowed to choose to die.
Kim Leadbeater, the MP who has made this possible, never held political aspirations. Previously a lecturer in health, Ms Leadbeater reluctantly stood for election after her sister Jo Cox was fatally stabbed and shot to death in a politically motivated attack in 2016.
And this is when, Ms Leadbeater says, she was forced to engage with the assisted dying debate. Because of the sheer volume of correspondence from constituents asking her to champion the cause.
Polls have consistently shown some 70% of people support assisted dying. And ultimately, it is this seismic shift in public opinion that has carried the vote. Britain now follows Canada, the USA, Belgium, Switzerland, the Netherlands and Australia. All countries with sophisticated health systems. Nowhere has assisted dying been reversed once introduced.
The relationship between doctor and patient will now also change. The question is being asked: Is an assisted death a treatment? There is no decisive answer. But it is a conversation that will now take place. The final answer could have significant consequences, especially in mental health settings.
There are still many unknowns. Who will be responsible for providing the service? The NHS? There is a strong emotional connection to the health service and many would oppose the move. But others will argue that patients trust the institution and would want to die in its arms.
The challenge for health leaders will be to try and reconcile the bitter divisions that now exist within the medical community. The Royal Colleges have tried to remain neutral on the issue, but continued to challenge Ms Leadbeater until the very end.
Their arguments of a failure of safeguards and scrutiny did not resonate with MPs. And nor did concerns over the further erosion of palliative care. Ms Leadbeater’s much-repeated insistence that “this is the most scrutinised legislation anywhere in the world” carried the most weight.
Her argument that patients should not have to fear prolonged, agonising deaths or plan trips to a Dignitas clinic to die scared and alone, or be forced to take their own lives and have their bodies discovered by sons, daughters, husbands and wives because they could not endure the pain any longer was compelling.
The country believed her.
The assisted dying debate was last heard in the Commons in 2015, when it was defeated by 330 votes to 118.
There have been calls for a change in the law for decades, with a campaign by broadcaster Dame Esther Rantzengiving the issue renewed attention in recent years.
Supporters have described the current law as not being fit for purpose, with desperate terminally ill people feeling the need to end their lives in secret or go abroad alone, for fear loved ones will be prosecuted for helping them.
Ahead of the vote, an hours-long emotionally charged debate heard MPs tell personal stories about their friends and family.
Maureen Burke, the Labour MP for Glasgow North East, spoke about how her terminally ill brother David was in so much pain from advanced pancreatic cancer that one of the last things he told her was that “if there was a pill that he could take to end his life, he would very much like to take that”.
She said she was “doing right by her brother” in voting for it.
How did MPs vote?
MPs were given a free vote, meaning they could vote with their conscience and not along party lines.
The division list shows Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer voted in favour of the bill, but Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch voted against.
Health Secretary Wes Streeting and Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood, who will have to deliver the bill, also voted no.
Opponents have raised both practical and ethical concerns, including that people could be coerced into seeking an assisted death and that the bill has been rushed through.
Veteran Labour MP Diane Abbott said she was not opposed to the principle of assisted dying but called the legislation “poorly drafted”.
Former foreign secretary James Cleverly echoed those concerns, saying he is “struck by the number of professional bodies which are neutral on the topic of assisted dying in general, but all are opposed to the provisions of this bill”.
Recently, the Royal College of Psychiatrists, the Royal College of Pathologists and the Royal College of Physicians have raised concerns about the bill, including that there is a shortage of staff to take part in assisted dying panels.
However, public support for a change in the law remains high, according to a YouGov poll published on the eve of the vote.
The survey of 2,003 adults in Great Britain suggested 73% of those asked last month were supportive of the bill, while the proportion of people who feel assisted dying should be legal in principle stood at 75%.
In November, the bill passed its second reading by a majority of 55, more than twice as large as today. It then went to “committee stage”, during which the wording and implications were examined in detail, and tweaked with input from experts, stakeholders and the public.
That amended bill will now be passed on to the House of Lords, where it will go through a similar process before being either passed back to the Commons with further amendments, or sent to the King for Royal Assent.
Only after both houses agree on the exact wording of the bill does it become law.
Who changed their vote since November?
A total of 56 MPs voted a different way today, compared to how they did in November. There were 11 who changed to yes, while 24 changed to no. There were also 21 MPs who voted last time who chose to abstain today.
Among those who chose to change their vote were foreign secretary David Lammy and culture secretary Lisa Nandy. Mr Lammy had voted against the bill in November, while Ms Nandy voted in favour. Both chose not to vote today.
Only one MP, Labour’s Jack Abbott, voted in favour today after voting against at the second reading.
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has voted in favour of the bill on both occasions, as has Chancellor Rachel Reeves and former prime minister Rishi Sunak.
The health secretary, Wes Streeting, who will have a crucial role in implementing the legislation if it becomes law, has voted against the bill both times, as has Angela Rayner, the deputy prime minister, and opposition party leaders Kemi Badenoch and Nigel Farage.
Lib Dem leader Ed Davey voted against the second reading, but chose not to vote today.
They were among 43 MPs in total who did not vote this time, including the Speaker and his Deputies. That’s slightly lower than the 46 MPs who abstained during the second reading vote in November.
Overall, a clear majority of Labour MPs supported the bill, while most Conservatives voted against it.
What do the public think?
Pollsters YouGov asked people if they were in favour of assisted dying or against, before November’s second reading and again last month.
On both occasions, a majority said they approved of the policy becoming legal, both in principle and in practice.
The Data and Forensics team is a multi-skilled unit dedicated to providing transparent journalism from Sky News. We gather, analyse and visualise data to tell data-driven stories. We combine traditional reporting skills with advanced analysis of satellite images, social media and other open source information. Through multimedia storytelling we aim to better explain the world while also showing how our journalism is done.
Vaults of enriched uranium and plutonium to make nuclear bombs are dotted about a secure site in Berkshire along with Anglo-Saxon burial mounds and a couple of lakes.
Surrounded by metal fences topped with barbed wire, much of the nuclear weapons facility at Aldermaston in Berkshire looks frozen in time from the 1950s rather than ready for war in the 21st century.
Image: The AWE site in Aldermaston is one of the UK’s most secure nuclear sites
But a renewed focus on the importance of the UK’s nuclear deterrent means the government is giving much of its nuclear infrastructure a facelift as it races to build a new warhead by the 2030s when the old stock goes out of service.
Sky News was among a group of news organisations given rare access to the largest of Britain’s nuclear weapons locations run by AWE.
The acronym stands for Atomic Weapons Establishment – but a member of staff organising the visit told me that the public body, which is owned by the Ministry of Defence, no longer attributes the letters that make up its name to those words.
“We are just A, W, E,” she said.
She did not explain why.
Perhaps it is to avoid making AWE’s purpose so immediately obvious to anyone interested in applying for a job but not so keen on weapons of mass destruction.
For the scientists and engineers, working here though, there seems to be a sense of genuine purpose as they develop and ensure the viability and credibility of the warheads at the heart of the UK’s nuclear deterrent, this country’s ultimate security guarantee.
“It’s nice to wake up every day and work on something that actually matters,” said a 22-year-old apprentice called Chris.
Sky News was asked not to publish his surname for security reasons.
The workforce at AWE is expanding fast, with 1,500 new people joining over the past year.
The organisation has some 9,500 employees in total, including about 7,000 at Aldermaston, where the warhead is developed and its component parts are manufactured.
Designing and building a bomb is something the UK has not needed to do for decades – not since an international prohibition on testing nuclear weapons came into force in the 1990s.
The last time, Britain test-fired a bomb was at a facility in Nevada in the US in 1991.
With that no longer an option, the scientists at AWE must rely on old data and new technology as they build the next generation of warhead.
This includes input from a supercomputer at the Aldermaston site that uses 17 megawatts of power and crunches four trillion calculations per second.
Another major help is a giant laser facility.
It is built in a hall, with two banks of long cylinders, lying horizontal and stacked one of top of the other running down the length of the room – these are part of the laser.
The beams are then zapped in a special, separate chamber, onto tiny samples of material to see how they react under the kind of extreme pressures and temperatures that would be caused in a nuclear explosion.
The heat is up to 10 million degrees – the same as the outer edge of the sun.
“You take all those beams at a billionth of a second, bring them altogether and heat a small target to those temperatures and pressures,” one scientist said, as he explained the process to John Healey, the defence secretary, who visited the site on Thursday.
Looking impressed, Mr Healey replied: “For a non-scientist that is hard to follow let alone comprehend.”
Image: Defence Secretary John Healey visited the site on Thursday
The Orion laser facility is the only one of its kind in the world, though the US – which has a uniquely close relationship with the UK over their nuclear weapons – has similar capabilities.
Maria Dawes, the director of science at AWE, said there is a sense of urgency at the organisation about the need to develop and then build the new bomb – which is a central part of the government’s new defence review published in early June.
“You’ve probably read the strategic defence review,” she said.
“There’s very much the rhetoric of this is a new era of threat and therefore it’s a new era for defence and AWE is absolutely at the heart of that and so a sense of urgency around: we need to step up and we need to make sure that we’ve got what our customer needs. Yes, there’s very much that sense here.”
It means an organisation that has for years been purely focused on ensuring the current stockpile of warheads is safe and works must shift to becoming more dynamic as it pursues a project that will be used to defend the UK long into the future.
In a sign of its importance, the government is spending £15bn over the next four years alone on the programme to build the new warheads.
Part of the investment is going into revamping Aldermaston.
Driving around the 700-acre site, which was once a Second World War airbase, many of the buildings were constructed into the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s.
The construction of new science and research laboratories is taking place.
But bringing builders onto one of the UK’s most secure nuclear sites is not without risk.
Everyone involved must be a British national and armed police patrols are everywhere.
No one would say what will be different about the new bomb that is being developed here compared with the version that needs replacing.
One official simply said the incumbent stock has a finite design life and will need to be swapped out.