The Citizen (Gauteng)

Ninow: ‘give him a life sentence’

People are calling for the maximum sentence for the Dros rapist.

- Citizen reporter news@citizen.co.za

Probation officer agrees the harshest sentence would be appropriat­e.

Asocial worker testifying in the pre-sentencing hearing for convicted child rapist Nicholas Ninow has asked the court to sentence him to life in prison.

Testifying in mitigation of his sentence in the High Court in Pretoria, Ninow said his rape of a seven-year-old girl in a toilet at the Dros restaurant in Silverton, Pretoria, in November last year “wasn’t personal”.

“I wasn’t angry at her, nothing was aimed at her,” he said, in answer to a question from state advocate Dorah Ngobeni.

This after Ninow claimed the three-day drug binge he had been on before the incident made him “angry and full of hatred”.

He claimed he acted on impulse alone and that he was a “different person” when he was high, and would not have committed such an “evil act” if sober.

Ninow was reportedly on a combinatio­n of crystal meth and khat.

He read a poem and a letter to the victim’s family earlier during proceeding­s, a move Ngobeni dismissed as an attempt to get a more lenient sentence.

The rapist denied this, and said he felt it was his duty to apologise.

While Ngobeni said he lacked remorse for his crime, because if he was truly remorseful he would be truthful about what happened, Ninow said he was full of self-loathing due to his crimes.

“People don’t need to hate me, I do enough of that for all of us,” he said.

Ngobeni told Ninow the victim still saw him in her nightmares regularly and that an image of him wearing a bloodied T-shirt was etched in her brain.

The prosecutor told Ninow his evidence contradict­ed that of a witness, who said he seemed to be in control and present following the act.

She questioned why he pleaded guilty if he claimed to not have been in control of his actions.

Ninow said he did so because he wanted to “take responsibi­lity for his actions”, like his grandmothe­r had taught him to do, and added he hoped to one day be a productive member of society.

Ngobeni countered that he only pleaded guilty because he had no choice as he was caught in the middle of the act, adding that his version of events – in which he said he acted impulsivel­y rather than in a premeditat­ed fashion – was not accurate.

Ninow had earlier described being abused as a child and

People don’t need to hate me, I do enough of that for all of us

Ngobeni asked why he would then abuse another child “in a public space”.

He had no answer to this, saying only that he didn’t know why he had committed the act.

Ngobeni asked why he forced himself on a child when he had never done so to his ex-fiancee or grandmothe­r, to which the rapist replied he had acted “in the spur of the moment” for reasons unknown to him.

The prosecutor also asked how Ninow could be attracted to the girl who, she said, weighed only 21kg and was only “three rulers” high and skinny.

He answered that he was not attracted to her.

Ngobeni also mentioned that his ex-fiancee had indicated that he became “more sexual” when on drugs and put forward the theory that Ninow had raped the girl because he knew he wasn’t able to seduce a woman at the restaurant he had made sexual comments about earlier in the day, according to a witness’s testimony during the initial trial.

The prosecutor asked Ninow whether the attack was planned. He denied that it was, or that he’d followed the child around prior to the act, as alleged by the prosecutio­n.

While Ninow said he hated himself, he also said he believed he could be an “amazing person” if given a second chance.

Probation officer Dete Kelder, however, told the court that the mitigating factors presented by the defence were not compelling enough and that Ninow should be sentenced to life in prison. –

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