Let me bury her, pleads murder accused


killer bishop may 24

An Archbishop wants out of jail so he can bury the woman he is accused of killing.

On Wednesday, Vumile Gwadela, 66, appeared at the Blue Downs Magistrates’ Court for a bail information hearing.

He is accused of kidnapping and killing his lover, 32-year-old Nonesi Mdekazi.

Family members informed the Daily Voice Gwadela had expressed his wish to be released on bail so that he can bury Nonesi.

Outraged by the statement, one of the victim’s relatives, Sibongile Mkwambi, says: “He can provide us with access to this money he talks about so that we can lay her to rest.

“But we don’t want him out on bail.

“The community is too upset and there is no telling what they are capable of if they could get their hands on him.”

Nonesi’s aunt, Noluthando Mdekazi, 39, says she is relieved the elderly man did not get bail.

 

“I just wish he can tell the truth so that we can bury Nonesi and find peace,” she says.

“We want to bury her in the Eastern Cape next week if the State would have released her body by then.”

The elderly Archbishop has admitted to police that he hired hitmen to kill his young lover from a Cape Flats township.

It is alleged the Zionist cleric scoured the township of Philippi seeking out men willing to to carry out the murder for a measly R3 500.

After a scramble to locate Gwadela’s new attorney proved fruitless, the matter was postponed by Magistrate Francis Makamadela to June 18.

He remains behind bars until the bail application in over three weeks from now.

Mfuleni residents came out in their numbers to protest outside the court, chanting that Gwadela should not get bail. Inside, community members packed the small courtroom in the hope of catching a glimpse of the frail accused.

Gwadela was arrested nearly two weeks ago by Cape Town police in Lady Frere, Eastern Cape, on a charge of kidnapping.

He fled to the rural area immediately after Nonesi mysteriously disappeared in April.

A mere four days after his arrest, he led police to a mountainous slope on the outskirts of Stellenbosch where Nonesi’s decomposing body was discovered.

A charge of murder was then added to the case.

 

*This article was published in the Daily Voice

‘I daily recall my parents’ murder scene’


van den bosch farm killing

‘Every day of my life, I recall even the smallest details of what I saw when I discovered my parents,” the son of an elderly couple who were murdered on their dairy farm outside Pretoria said on Tuesday.

Wim van den Bosch found his mother’s body in a pool of blood in the farmhouse.

His father’s corpse was in the shed where he kept his calves.

Johannes, 62, and Jacoba van den Bosch were murdered early on the morning of April 10, 2009, by a former labourer, Akona Innocent Gini, 30. They were bludgeoned and stabbed to death.

Judge Cynthia Pretorius on Tuesday convicted the man on two counts of murder as well as robbery.

There was no direct evidence to link Gini to the killings, but the circumstantial evidence was enough to point all fingers at him, she said.

Gini worked for the Dutch couple on their Boschkop farm, east of Pretoria. He was dismissed six months before thekillings when he was suspected of breaking into their house.

Wim van den Bosch, who also lived on the farm, testified earlier that his mother was cold when he discovered her body in the house.

When he discovered his father, he did not have to check whether he was dead. “When I saw all the blood, I knew he was dead,” he testified.

He noticed something was wrong when he returned after fetching some workers and found his parents’ dogs roaming around.

Van den Bosch said he found it odd that the door to the farmhouse was locked. He unlocked it and found his mother lying about a metre from the door, in a pool of blood.

He knew something was wrong with his father when he heard the calves bleating. “I just wanted to find my father. By then the world had come to a standstill.”

He first went to the dairy and could not find his father. His last option was to go to the shed where his father kept his hand-reared calves. “When I opened the door I saw him on the ground,” he said.

Denying any wrongdoing, Gini said he had a very good relationship with the couple, he was paid a good salary, lived on the property and he was given ample food for his family.

When he was arrested the police found the man’s cellphone in his pocket. His wife had the woman’s cellphone. Calls were made from the phones soon after the killings.

Gini later pointed out to the police where he had killed the couple and where he threw the house keys into a cement dam on the farm.

Judge Pretorius said Gini was an evasive, untruthful witness.

The Van den Bosch couple had 12 children, five of whom were at court on Tuesday. Wim van den Bosch said they were relieved that the trial was nearly over after three years.

Asked whether he would forgive Gini for killing his parents, he said his only feeling was one of powerlessness. “Shortly after my parents were killed I was asked whether I feel like going on a murder spree. I always thought I would do that, until it became a reality. I just feel powerless, because I know it will change nothing.”

Meanwhile, Gini is denying a string of previous convictions, after first saying he could not remember whether he had committed them.

The case was postponed to June 8 so that the police could testify about his criminal record.

Pretoria News