The 34-year-old man, whose name has been redacted from court documents, denied he had any intention to kill her in December 2013 but claimed he had taken a knife with him to meet her as he intended to commit suicide in front of her, The Straits Times reported today.
But he could not recall what had happened when he stabbed her at the void deck of an apartment block where the student nurse lived.
He will be sentenced a later date. He faces life imprisonment or up to 20 years in prison, and possible caning or a fine.
The man got to know the student nurse in February 2013, while she was attached to the hospital where he worked as a healthcare assistant.
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He wooed her even though she had a boyfriend. She initially played along but later apologised, telling him "it was a joke all along".
On 19 Dec, 2013, he again went to her home to propose marriage. He behaved aggressively on being rebuffed but left after the police were called. He went home, hid a knife in his sock and returned, sleeping at the void deck to wait for her.
At about 8.30am the next day, he confronted her and demanded she go with him to talk. When she refused, he stabbed her in the lower back. She tried to push him away but he stabbed her in the abdomen.
The woman's parents rushed down upon hearing her screams. When her father saw the accused with a knife in his hand on top of his daughter, he pushed the assailant away.
The knife dropped and the accused fled after a brief struggle. He was detained by two passers-by and arrested by the police.
Justice Woo accepted the victim's account, who said that as the accused was stabbing her, he shouted "saavudi" in Tamil, which meant "die". He also told her: "If I can't have you, no man should have you."
The number and nature of the injuries, as well as the way the accused had attacked the victim, reinforced his view that the man had intended to kill her, the judge said.