North West Modise to meet police over farm scandal: Report


Thandi-Modise.jpg
NCOP chair Thandi Modise on Sunday declined to discuss a report that she would meet police to discuss the discovery, earlier this year, of dead and starving animals on her North West farm.

“I don’t want to comment,” Modise said when asked about the Sunday Times reporting that a meeting with police had been scheduled for next week.

The newspaper quoted North West police spokesman Brigadier Thulani Ngubane as saying the National Council of Provinces chairwoman had been “co-operating with us from day one”.

He said a meeting planned for July had been postponed, but that police understood “the nature of her work and business”.
In July this year, police and NSPCA inspectors found more than 100 dead animals, including sheep, geese, goats and ducks, on her farm. It appeared they had been without food or water for over a week.

About 85 pigs, who were still alive, had begun cannibalising 58 dead pigs, and were reportedly drinking their own urine. Many others found alive had to be put down.

There were no farmworkers on the property, no electricity, and the water pumps were broken.
On Sunday, Ngubane said while police were still awaiting Modise’s version of events, others involved in the matter had already been providing statements. Modise had reportedly told police she would travel to Potchefstroom to meet them.

The National Prosecuting Authority told the Sunday Times it had not received a docket, indicating whether Modise would be prosecuted.
On Friday the NSPCA said conditions on the farm had improved.

“Cattle on the farm have been supplied with sufficient food and appear to be in an acceptable condition,” spokeswoman Grace de Lange said in a statement.
She said farm managers were implementing advice from vets on how to run the farm.

-Sapa

‘My poor child was brutally murdered’


muizenberg murder

A 50-year-old man is under police guard in a hospital after he allegedly killed two children – his son and the daughter of his girlfriend – at the Village Heights informal settlement in Muizenberg.

Four-year-old Shaylin Petersen and her two-year-old half-brother Lionel died after he allegedly cut their throats.

He then tried to take his own life.

The man is being investigated for the children’s murder.

The Cape Argus went to the scene on Wednesday and spoke to Shaylin’s father, 37-year-old

Anthony Petersen.

He is no longer married to the children’s mother, Yolandie Petersen, 27.

Petersen said that he arrived at his ex-wife’s home on Wednesday afternoon where he found his daughter’s tiny, bleeding body.

There were multiple holes in her jacket.

“I couldn’t even look at my child. She was brutally murdered… My poor child. Lionel had the same cut,” he said.

Yolandie Petersen was scared of Lionel’s father, according to Anthony Petersen.

He said she went out on Wednesday morning and returned in the afternoon.

“She came back, knocked, and when there was no answer she peeped through her bedroom window and saw the children.

“She started screaming and running and the neighbours came to help,” Anthony Petersen said.

Inside the house, she was confronted by her worst nightmare.

The once-brown carpet was stained red with blood as were the children’s belongings.

A cabinet where the toddlers’ shoes were usually stacked, was spattered in blood.

Next to it was a 50 cent coin.

She (Shaylin) loved 50 cents. Every time I came here she’d say: ‘Daddy, chips, five bob’.”

“She was very fond of going to school. When her mommy went to pick her up from school, she wanted to stay there. She was a very lively and bubbly child. She was very obedient, but also a bit cheeky. She would make fun of you if she knew you,” said Anthony Petersen.

He said he “freaked out” when he received a call at work around 12.10pm on Wednesday, informing him that Shaylin was dead.

“I was very angry. It’s hurting very badly deep inside…

“How can (someone) kill an innocent child who’s done nothing?” Petersen asked.

He said he hoped that justice would be served.

Warrant Officer November Filander confirmed that a 50-year-old man, believed to be Lionel’s father, was being investigated for the murders.

He said the suspect was under police custody in a hospital.

Filander added:

“It is believed he collected (the children) from the crèche (on Wednesday) morning before committed the crimes.”

sibongakonke.mama@inl.co.za

Cape Argus

Stray bullet kills mom


kevin adams_dv

A Cape Flats mother died in her kitchen in front of her seven children after she was hit by a gangster’s stray bullet.

Elsabe Petersen, 42, instinctively ran to look for her teen daughter when she heard several gunshots fired outside her Elsies River home.

Minutes before the shootout, Elsabe sent the 14-year-old to a nearby tuck shop to buy a candle and she feared her child could be hurt.

It was before 8pm on Monday when rival gang members opened fire on each other in Porterville Court, Elsies River.

Without thinking, the panic-stricken mother opened the door and ran out looking for her child.

Elsabe was barely outside her home when she was hit in the back by a stray bullet.

On Tuesday, Bronwin Petersen, 18, described how he and his siblings watched helplessly as their mother collapsed in a pool of blood.

 

“My mom came from work and she was busy cooking supper when she sent my sister to the shop,” he says.

“Just after my sister left, we heard the gunshots and my mom went out looking for her.

“When she opened the door they (gunmen) shot at our house and that’s when my mom was hit.

Bronwin says his mother turned back after she was shot and collapsed inside their kitchen while they scurried to get help.

“My ma het ingekom toe sê sy net ‘ek was geskiet’ en toe val sy op die vloer [My mom came in and said she was shot, then fell on the floor],” says the teen.

 

“We were all standing in the kitchen around her.

“I ran to our neighbour and asked them to call an ambulance.

“When I got back, I closed the wound with a towel to stop the bleeding and covered her with a blanket while my stepdad held her.

“By the time police arrived, she was already gone.”

His sister Kaylin says she was on her way to the shop when she heard the shots.

“I was walking to the shop when they started shooting,” she says with tears in her eyes.

“My mom sent me to buy a candle which she wanted to use in one of the rooms.

“When the shots went off, I ran into the house next door.

Elsabe died in front of her partner Kevin Adams and their children aged 22, 18, 14, 11, eight, six, and her youngest son just three years old.

When the Daily Voice visited the family at their home on Tuesday, Kevin was at the mortuary to identify her body.

Bronwin was left with the responsibility of taking care of his younger siblings.

The visibly shaken children were all quietly seated next to each other on their tattered sofas.

Meanwhile outside, angry residents clashed with police following the terrible tragedy.

“We want the police to arrest the people who did this,” one furious woman shouted.

“An innocent mother died because she wanted to protect her children.”

Police say a 30-year-old suspect was arrested on Monday in connection with Elsabe’s murder.

Provincial police spokesman Warrant Officer November Filander says the suspect was found without the firearm.

“Police found (Elsabe) lying on the kitchen floor,” he says.

“Two rival gangs fired shots at each other when she went outside looking for her daughter.

“The community alerted police to the whereabouts of the 30-year-old suspect who was arrested shortly thereafter without a firearm,” Filander explains.

The man will appear in the Goodwood Magistrates’ Court once he’s been formally charged.

*This article was published in the Daily Voice


Wife killer wants case reviewed


IOL wld dec28 prison bars

A jailed truck repair company owner now claims that he was forced by police to plead guilty to the murder of his wife in 2010.

Rajive Sewnarain’s application for a review and the setting aside of his murder conviction and life sentence imposed on December 22, 2010 came before the Pietermaritzburg High Court on Thursday.

In December 2010 Sewnarain, of Montclair, had revealed the details of the planned killing of his wife Shanaaz Sewnarain – which bore similarities to allegations made in the Anni Dewani murder trial.

However, after the murder, he had told police that he and his wife were the victims of a hijacking, during which he had been shot in the shoulder. He then blacked out and was pushed from the car.

His wife’s body was found in the back of the car the same night.

In court papers, it was submitted that before pleading guilty, Sewnarain had been assaulted by police. A firearm was pointed to his chest and he was threatened that if he did not admit to the murder, he would be shot. He also noticed “other persons” being severely assaulted by police.

The investigating officer had also allegedly told him that if he confessed, he would stand a better chance of getting a more lenient sentence.

It was also alleged that Sewnarain was not allowed to retain the services of an attorney of his choice.

“He wasn’t in his sound and sober senses when he pleaded guilty, having been under medication, tired, drowsy and not fit to stand trial,” said the papers.

 

The appeal was adjourned to the end of July.

In his plea, Sewnarain said a hitman had been hired to carry out the act and, to prove the veracity of his hijack claim, he was shot in the shoulder and bundled out of the car.

Sewnarain said his 20-year marriage was volatile and that earlier that month, a bus owner, “Boxer”, had said he could help him “take his wife out of his life” for R30 000.

On the day of the murder, Sewnarain told his wife he was going to take her out to buy pizza. He then gave Boxer a missed call and they drove to a pre-arranged spot.

The hitman then jumped into the couple’s car.

 

While Sewnarian was driving, the man fired a shot at his wife before Sewnarain was shot and pushed out of the car. – The Mercury


POLICE NEED THE ASSISTANCE OF THE COMMUNITY ON HARTBEESFONTEIN MURDER


BY Obakeng Maje

On 29 May 2012 at about 07:00 Police found the body of a 55-year-old woman and her 12-year-old son that were brutally killed inside their house in Tigane, Hartbeesfontein.

 

Dipuo Kolobe was found tied with a brown belt around the neck and her throat was cut off. Her son, Lebogang Kolobe, was found in the sleeping room, his throat was also cut off.

 

The police followed up all possible leads but no arrests could be made up to now.

 

The police  request the community to assist  with any information that can lead to the arrest of the perpetrators.

 

Anybody with any information that can lead to the arrest can contactD/CAPTAIN THABANENG AT 082 373 7658 OR D/CONSTABLE name of the constable 072 777 2896

Killer mom: Poison was my way out


poison mom

By Fatima Schroeder

A Cape Town mother who poisoned her eight-month-old daughter to death did so because she felt there was no other way out of the bleak financial situation she found herself in, the Western Cape High Court has heard.

Phamela Somkence, 29, of Philippi was sentenced to 10 years behind bars on Monday after she admitted that she poisoned her daughter to death and attempted to kill the child’s older sister in the same way.

 The incident took place at their Browns Farm home in October 2010 when Somkence mixed poison into her daughters’ fruit juice and gave it to them before drinking the same deadly concoction in a bid to end her own life.

The young mother claimed she did it because she felt it was the only way out of the dire financial situation she was in as a result of being unemployed.

Somkence and eight-year-old Thimna survived after medical treatment, but Ichume died before reaching a hospital.

In a plea and sentence agreement concluded with the State on Monday, it emerged that Somkence was taking emotional strain at the time she committed the offences because she could not find a job.

She has a secretarial diploma.

In addition, she did not receive financial help from the children’s fathers and had received several letters of demand for outstanding debt.

Her hopes were raised a week before the murder when Thimna’s father told her he would contribute to the maintenance of his child because he had found a job.

However, he died a day after he spoke to her, shattering her hopes of alleviating their poverty-stricken situation.

In desperation, she approached Ichume’s father for financial assistance.

However, she claims that his family turned her away and allegedly assaulted her because they saw her as a nuisance.

Following the alleged assault, she obtained an order against his sister.

In addition, the relationship between Somkence and her own family had also broken down and she began to feel isolated.

The day after the alleged assault at the hands of Ichume’s father’s family, Somkence thought that ending their lives was the only way out.

One of the aggravating factors taken into account when negotiating the plea bargain was the increasing number of similar offences.

In addition, she had the children’s trust and had ample time to reconsider her actions.

Thimna will now have to live with the knowledge that her own mother tried to poison her and that her sister died after drinking the poison.

However, the mitigating factors taken into account by the court include that Somkence is a first offender and that she showed genuine remorse for what she did.

In addition, by pleading guilty, she also spared the court and the State the expense of a protracted trial, and prevented the surviving daughter from having to testify against her.

Her emotional state and “feelings of helplessness” as a result of her financial situation were considered to be substantial and compelling circumstances, justifying a departure from the prescribed minimum sentence of life imprisonment.

Before Cape Judge President John Hlophe on Monday, Somkence confirmed that she understood the consequences of pleading guilty to the charges of murder and attempted murder.

She said the contents of the plea and sentence agreement had been explained to her before she signed it.

 

The murder and attempted murder charges were taken together for the purposes of sentencing and she received a term of 15 years behind bars, of which five years were suspended for five years on condition that she was not convicted of an offence involving violence.

Somkence’s advocate, Lara Joubert, informed the court that, since her client was the primary caregiver for the surviving child, provision had been made for Thimna’s care while Somkence was in prison.

A report from the Department of Social Development was handed to the court.

As the court adjourned, Somkence’s mother, Aganethu, wept uncontrollably as family members comforted her in the public gallery.

She hugged Somkence as court orderlies led her away.

Somkence’s relatives declined to speak to the media.

 

A disturbing trend of similar cases

* Thirty-one-year-old Zulpha Jacobs, pictured, has been charged with murder and child abandonment after the body of her two-year-old son Tariq was found in a shallow grave close to Imperial Primary School in Beacon Valley on December 31.

A neighbourhood watch member found his body.

* In February, 35-year-old Nyarai Chiwandire, stepped in front of an oncoming train near Eerste River railway station with her 16-month-old daughter Rosemary and six-day-old son Allan, killing all three.

* Last month, the Western Cape High Court sentenced Nonkholiso Skotha, 51, of Zwelethemba, Worcester, to 15 years in prison after she killed her nephews for not doing their house chores.

Seven-year-old Ntumeko Mboxi and 11-year-old Zama had been in Skotha’s care since their mother died in 2005.

In a plea bargain she pleaded guilty to murder and assault with intent to commit grievous bodily harm.

* Thirty-five-year-old Venolia Siwa stands accused in the Pampierstad Magistrate’s Court in the Northern Cape of the murders of her five children in October last year.

She allegedly forced her children to drink a cocktail of brake fluid and cooldrink but then drowned them when she thought they were not dying quickly enough.

The eldest, Sizwe, was disabled. The other children were Lukanyo, 10, Edward, five, Reatlegile, four, and Matiki, two.

 

Cape Argus

Family wiped out in crash


crime scene may 14

By Daneel Knoetze

A grandmother was mourning the loss of her daughter and three grandsons on Sunday, after they died in a car crash on the R27 outside Langebaan late on Saturday night.

Melicia Wilsnach, her fiancé Moegamat Miller, and their sons, Damian ,16, Callum, seven, and Marcus, one, were travelling from Cape Town with two family friends when the car collided with a truck and trailer.

All seven occupants of the car died. The names of the family friends – a child and man – have not yet been released. The driver of the truck was not hurt.

The group had been returning home to St Helena Bay, said Jasintha Huyshamen, Wilsnach’s mother.

“The night the accident happened I had a bad feeling, I couldn’t sleep. Then my neighbour came to me the next morning to say she had some bad news…” she said. “To lose a whole family just like that, it’s devastating.”

It was Callum’s seventh birthday on Saturday.

 

The truck, pulling two trailers, was travelling south on the R27 and was turning right towards the Engen 1-Stop at Langebaan Junction.

The Toyota Corolla collided with a wheel axle on the first trailer and became lodged underneath, said Rob Nel of SA Paramedics Services.

 

Six people were dead when paramedics arrived. They helped to remove a boy, who was alive, from the wreck.

 

“The boy was taken to the Vredenburg Provincial Hospital where he died shortly after being admitted.”

Keri Davids, spokeswoman for provincial Emergency Medical Services (EMS), said paramedics hadworked for almost two hours to remove the bodies. “The vehicle was very badly mangled and the Jaws of Life had to be used.”

 

Police spokesman Lieutenant-Colonel André Traut said the crash was being investigated.

 

Natie Lotz, the manager of the Langebaan Junction Engen 1-Stop, said the cause of the accident was a mystery to him.

“It’s not a particularly dangerous stretch of road or turnover,” he said. “In the six years that I’ve been here, I’ve only heard of two accidents.”

Cape Argus