The Voice (Botswana)

‘YOU CAN’T HAVE MY GIRLFRIEND­S AND MY SISTER!’

Angry brother escapes jail after stabbing love rival

- BY FRANCINAH BAAITSE

A Maun man breathed a sigh of relief this week after he was handed a two-year suspended sentence for stabbing a perceived love rival he believed was sleeping with both his sister and his girlfriend­s.

42-year-old Taolo Segadimo of Boseja ward was summoned before Maun Customary Court on Monday morning to answer for the crime committed almost four months ago.

According to the complainan­t, Bruce Mmonawatsh­eko, 30, the incident, which landed him in a hospital bed with internal bleeding, nursing a stab wound to his chest, played out on the evening of 22nd April.

Telling his tale to court, Mmonawetsh­eko revealed he was walking home at around 11 at night after enjoying a few beers at a local bar.

His route took him past Segadimo’s place, where his lover, Segadimo’s sister, also stayed.

“I did not enter the yard. I only called out the sister’s name when I was passing by. Taolo came and said, ‘You cannot sleep with my sister while you have been sleeping with my girlfriend­s; that cannot happen! I will kill you,” he narrated.

Monnawatsh­eko further told court Segadimo was very angry and, unprovoked, stabbed him with a knife on the upper left side of his chest.

“I woke up in hospital with my t-shirt and jersey having been torn away as they were soaked in blood,” continued the complainan­t, demanding P800 compensati­on for his ruined clothes.

Displaying his scars to The Voice outside court, Monnawatsh­eko explained the top wound was inflicted by Segadimo while the lower cut was an insertion made by doctors to let the blood out.

He further insisted the weapon used was a sharp Okapi knife and not the bread knife produced in court.

“He was irate and jealous because he felt I had slept with his ‘women’ and now I was seeing his sister. He wanted to kill me,” maintained Monnawatsh­eko.

Giving a slightly different version of events, Segadimo told court the bloody altercatio­n occurred after the other man insulted his sister and mother.

“He said he was looking for my loose sister who has probably taken after my mother. That is when I lost it and grabbed him. But he hit me on the mouth first. When I turned my back in a brace and with both my hands on my mouth, he took a brick and hit me on my back. I remembered that there was a bread knife lying nearby because I had used it earlier to fix the windows,” contended Segadimo.

KNIFE

He said he ran for it and, as he came forth with the knife, Monnawatsh­eko tried to grab it, resulting in a scuffle.

“That is how he got injured. I do not know whether he pulled it towards himself or I somehow accidental­ly stabbed him. What I know is that the injury was not intentiona­l.”

Nonetheles­s, Segadimo pleaded guilty to the crime that could potentiall­y put him behind bars for seven years.

Instead, Kgosi Kebatho Kesekile saw fit to hand out a suspended two-year jail term, on condition he does not commit a similar offence within the next 12 months.

The chief further fined him P600 as compensati­on for Monnawatsh­eko’s ripped t-shirt and jersey, a fine he must pay within 30 days.

Both parties were also given 30 days within which to appeal the verdict if they so desire.

 ?? ?? SCARRED SURVIVOR: Monnawatsh­eko shows his scars
SCARRED SURVIVOR: Monnawatsh­eko shows his scars

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