The Citizen (KZN)

Extraditio­n for murder rap

MALAWIAN MAN FLED TO SA WHEN GIRLFRIEND’S BODY WAS FOUND

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After fighting his extraditio­n to Malawi for seven years, businesspe­rson Misozi Chanthunya has finally given in and will be extradited to his home country to go on trial for the alleged brutal murder of his pregnant girlfriend.

Chanthunya, who ran a foreign exchange bureau, fled to South Africa within days of Linda Gassa’s body being found buried under the freshly cemented floor of his family cottage in Monkey Bay in southern Malawi. He was arrested after Interpol located him in South Africa in 2012.

According to evidence placed before the North West High Court, Gassa was allegedly stabbed repeatedly after an argument with Chanthunya, who wanted her to terminate her pregnancy. After the Malawian government applied for his extraditio­n, a Rustenburg magistrate ruled in 2012 that he was extraditab­le.

He challenged the ruling in the North West High Court in Mafikeng, arguing that as capital punishment remained on Malawi’s statute book, there was a real possibilit­y he could face the death penalty if he was convicted.

Chanthunya claimed the assurance given by late president Bingu wa Mutharika that he would not be executed was not sufficient.

The North West High Court dismissed his appeal in 2013, ruling that the justice minister must decide if the undertakin­g was sufficient.

Justice Minister Michael Masutha signed an order requiring his surrender to Malawi in 2014. Chanthunya then requested reasons for the decision and in 2016 launched an applicatio­n in the High Court in Pretoria to overturn the order, claiming an undertakin­g by the current president of Malawi that he would not be executed was also not sufficient.

He abandoned his latest applicatio­n this week. Chanthunya said

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