Saturday Star

Cape woman ‘raped as teen by UK star’

Anneline Kriel may be called as a witness to claimant’s ordeal in 1970s

- MIKE BEHR

OPERATION Yewtree, the landmark British police investigat­ion into sexual abuse allegation­s dating back decades, put some superstars behind bars: singer and TV star Rolf Harris, pop idol of yesteryear Gary Glitter and showbiz publicist Max Clifford. The reputation of deceased DJ and TV personalit­y Jimmy Savile was destroyed by the shocking revelation­s he was a sexual predator.

Over in the US, actor Bill Cosby stands accused of dozens of rapes dating back to the 1960s.

And now, on the desk of a Sea Point police detective lies a docket of a similar explosive nature.

The investigat­ion, which has the potential to send shock waves across the world revolves around a child-rape allegation against a global pop star from the UK, who cannot be named until he is officially charged.

A Grammy-award winning singer, he holds an OBE and has been courted by politician­s, celebritie­s and TV networks across the world.

A Sea Point woman, now in her 50s, has provided police with graphic testimony alleging the superstar raped her on his bed in room 629 of the old President hotel when she was a 14-year-old virgin.

Her evidence is that the nightmare experience began innocently on Saturday, March 6, 1976 when she and her friends went autograph hunting at the hotel.

By chance, the naive teenagers arrived as the star, then in his 30s, was pulling up to the hotel in his limousine. He spotted them and instructed a bodyguard to give them tickets to his concert that night at the Three Arts in Plumstead.

During the show a minder allegedly tapped the complainan­t on her shoulder and told her the star would like to meet her in his hotel room the next day.

After Sunday school class the girl and her friends, aged 13 and 14, walked to the nearby President hotel, hoping to get an autograph for their “find-astar” project.

In the lobby, the star’s bodyguard allegedly told the girl to leave her friends and accompany him.

She says she was led into a 6th floor hotel suite where she saw a number of people, including the star’s back-up singers and a beauty queen who introduced herself as Miss World, Anneline Kriel.

She says the star appeared from his room wearing a white bathrobe and she was led onto the balcony when he posed alongside her for photograph­s. She was allegedly shown into his bedroom and offered a drink that turned out to be champagne, her first taste of alcohol.

She claims that when she was feeling tipsy the star forcibly raped her on the bed while telling her to relax.

After the alleged rape she noticed blood on the sheets and became alarmed, not realising at the time that it was because her virginity had been broken.

In fear and confusion, the woman claims she fled the room, noticing the suite was deserted.

Later at home, after showering, her mother noticed bruises on her body but she could not bring herself to reveal her ordeal.

Following decades of suffering from trauma, confusing advice from friends and law- yers and several unsuccessf­ul attempts to lay a charge, the woman had a chance encounter with a senior police officer who ensured that a docket was opened at Sea Point in August 2014.

This was after she had e-mailed her allegation­s in 2013 to Britian’s Scotland Yard, which infor med her British detectives were unable to inves- tigate the case as the alleged offence occurred outside their jurisdicti­on.

The Metropolit­an Police confirmed they would register the case for intelligen­ce purposes and passed her allegation­s on to their South African counterpar­ts.

Following an investigat­ion that muddled facts and timelines, the National Prosecutin­g Authority (NPA) in September 2015 declined to prosecute, saying there was no reasonable prospect of a successful outcome. But, after strong and compelling representa­tions to the NPA, a new prosecutor and an investigat­ing officer were assigned to the case.

The docket is now back with the investigat­ing officer who met the complainan­t last week. New avenues of investigat­ion are apparently being pursued.

This was confir med this week by NPA spokespers­on Eric Ntabazalil­a.

“We can confirm that charges were registered against (name omitted for legal reasons) in respect of events which are alleged to have occurred in the 1970s in Cape Town.

“The charges (are) registered under Sea Point CAS 641/8/2014. The case docket has been referred back to the SAPS with a request for further investigat­ion.

“This is with a view to enabling us to make a decision regarding prosecutio­n. The docket will be further considered upon its return from the SAPS.”

A Cape Town lawyer familiar with the facts of the case told Independen­t Media he had no doubt “the allegation­s are authentic.

“He said the complainan­t was a credible witness with excellent recall of events.

“The key to a successful prosecutio­n in my opinion is finding witnesses who place the complainan­t in the star’s hotel suite and who can speak for her childlike demeanour.

“And the smoking gun is the bloodied sheets. If the prosecutio­n can find someone from the President housekeepi­ng staff who remembers removing bloodied linen from the sixth floor, it would leave the defence having to explain a lot.

“Not least how a minor came to shed so much blood in a private hotel room where the only other person present was the star in question.”

 ??  ?? Miss SA 1974 Anneline Kriel might be called as a witness in a rape case.
Miss SA 1974 Anneline Kriel might be called as a witness in a rape case.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa