NPA to appeal ‘shock verdict’
Sizwe Sama Yende
The National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) is trying to rectify a “miscarriage of justice” after four men were fined R20 000 each last month for the gruesome murder of a 35-year-old man.
Senior Tzaneen Magistrates’ Court prosecutor Solomon Ngobeni is angry that magistrate Vic Smith downgraded a murder charge to assault and sentenced the men to a fine of R10 000 each.
Limpopo farmers Gerhardt Vorster and Jacobus Botha, security guard Johannes Badenhorst and farm labourer Lucky Manenzhe assaulted Allan Rapatsa in October last year after accusing him of stealing copper cables. They beat him to death.
They tied Rapatsa to a tree, pinched his genitals with pliers, punched and kicked him and flogged him with a sjambok.
Rapatsa’s head was then smashed against a tree stump.
Smith convicted the men of assault, a charge they pleaded guilty to, and fined them R20 000 each with R10 000 suspended for three years.
“I’m not happy with the ruling. It was not correct to downgrade the charge,” Ngobeni said.
NPA spokesperson Lucinda Moonieya said the NPA would appeal the sentence.
“We feel that the sentence is not in accordance with justice,” Moonieya said.
But Rapatsa’s case is not the only one where the scales of justice have been tilted.
Kabelo Thibedi’s conviction caused an outcry among political parties, the South African Human Rights Commission and the general public after he was sentenced to five years’ imprisonment last Thursday for holding a Johannesburg home affairs official, Anel Small, hostage with a toy gun in November last year.
He was granted leave to appeal and is out on R3 000 bail.
In 2001, farm worker William Laka (47) was shot dead with an R-4 rifle allegedly by nine members of the Mokopane Commando.
One suspect, Pieter Swanepoel, was charged with murder, but the charge was withdrawn so that an inquest hearing could be held to determine who pulled the trigger.
Naboomspruit senior prosecutor Elba Nel said the NPA subsequently decided not to prosecute Swanepoel.
A land rights non-governmental organisation, the Nkuzi Development Association, is suing the department of defence for R100 000 for loss of support for Laka’s wife.
Patricia Mosoane (33) is wheelchair bound after a stray bullet penetrated her skull in 1999.
The bullet allegedly came from the direction of farmers who were shooting birds at a nearby farm in the Marble Hall area in Mpumalanga.
All the suspects were found not guilty four years later due to lack of evidence.
The bullet is still lodged in her skull.
Doctors fear it would be fatal to remove it.
Nkuzi project officer Vasco Mabunda said they were in the process of bringing a civil claim against the perpetrators.
http://www.news24.com/City_Press/News/0,,186-187_2032540,00.html
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