The Monitor (Botswana)

Convicted ‘pregnant baby mama’ killer denied appeal

- Mpho Mokwape Staff Writer

Aconvicted murderer, Keamogetse Matakata, will serve his 30-year jail term after he was denied a chance to appeal his sentence. Matakata was on Friday denied the chance to appeal as he wanted to be given leave to appeal way out of stipulated time.

He was convicted and sentenced on October 4, 2017, after pleading guilty to one count of murder for killing his pregnant baby mama, Tshepo Mafikeng with an axe in Serowe. Court of Appeal Justice, Leatile Dambe dismissed Matakata’s applicatio­n on grounds that his appeal had no prospects of success.

“In my view, it cannot be said the sentence passed is disproport­ionate to the offence because circumstan­ces of this case are truly rare and exceptiona­l. The court adopted the right approach which cannot be faulted. I am of the view that proof of very strong prospects of success is also non-existent in the prospectiv­e appeal,” she said.

Justice Dambe explained that the circumstan­ces of the case were rare and exceptiona­l in the sense that it was a horrific murder by all accounts, a woman at an advanced stage of pregnancy hacked to death by a man who was once her lover, in the presence of her children.

The judge pointed out that she did not think that failure to take pre-trial incarcerat­ion of one year would be a justificat­ion for the court to hold that the applicatio­n raised very strong prospects of success, especially bearing in mind that as settled by law, an appeal’s court should not interfere with a sentence imposed by the trial court merely because it is of the view that had it tried the case, it would have imposed a different sentence. “This was the killing of a woman at the hands of a former lover. This court has expressed the view of Lord Coulsfield’s guidelines on what appropriat­e sentence should be where a woman lost her life at the hands of their lovers was not cast in stone and as there had not been an improvemen­t in the situation since those guidelines were issued, the sentences should be ratcheted up,” she said.

Justice Dambe also emphasized that the sentence was appropriat­e because the judge below took into account the fact that the killer was a first-time offender and 28 years old when he committed the offence and that he had three young children and at the time of the commission of the offence he had consumed alcohol.

She said the judge also remarked that the fact that he has three young children would ordinarily be considered a mitigating factor because in their mother’s absence the children would

rely on him for emotional and material support, but in this case, it was not so.

“The judge took the view that such could not be considered in his favour because he hacked the pregnant woman with an axe in the children’s presence. The court below correctly in my view considered that as an aggravatin­g factor,” Dambe said.

Meanwhile, the back story of the case is that the killer had a relationsh­ip with the deceased with whom he had three children. They separated and the deceased moved to Francistow­n where she was working. She had a relationsh­ip with another man and became pregnant. The deceased went home to Serowe for maternity leave and on August 4, 2012, whilst the deceased was with her brothers and others sitting by the fire the killer came and began a discussion about his children with the deceased.

It is said that the brothers and other people left leaving the deceased and the killer together with their two children and that was the time the killer chopped the deceased in the presence of the children. She was admitted to hospital for head injuries and died five days later, which the forensic pathologis­t said was caused by shock due to the head injury.

Matakata was convicted of murder based on the evidence and extenuatin­g circumstan­ces were found. On October 4, 2017, he was sentenced to 30 years imprisonme­nt by the Francistow­n High Court.

He is to serve a 30-year jail

term

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