Cape Times

Cops blamed for not guilty verdict in case

- Siyavuya Mzantsi

THE police’s handling of the murder and rape investigat­ion of Khayelitsh­a teenager Sinoxolo Mafevuka has been cited as one of the reasons the Western Cape High Court found the two accused not guilty.

The accused, Xolisa and Athabile Mafilika, who are cousins of Mafevuka’s boyfriend, walked free on Monday after the court found that the State failed to prove its case beyond reasonable doubt.

Judge Taswell Papier in his judgment was critical about the way police handled the matter.

The initial investigat­ing officer Cornelius van Niekerk did not have the notes of the interview he had conducted with the two upon their apprehensi­on. He had also not informed them of their rights. He was later removed from the case and a new officer assigned.

Judge Papier said there was no direct evidence linking the two to the crimes.

Mafevuka’s near-naked body was found last March by residents.

The last time her family saw her was when she had gone to use the toilet.

Her lower back was facing the toilet door, while her face was under the toilet seat, with her clothes scattered in the toilet and some stuffed in a cistern. “We think that the judge made a good call in the sense that the evidence required to convict two young men wasn’t there.

“The judge was at pains to make the point that he has to treat everyone equally before the law and the evidence put in front of him was contradict­ory (and) in other instances there were gaps.

“There was also no sense of what time Mafevuka might have passed away,” said SJC co-head of programmes Dalli Weyers.

“It’s been 20 months since Mafevuka was murdered. A lot of what the judge was saying and the problem he had with the evidence put in front of him seemed to have been the evidence collected by the first investigat­ing officer assigned to the case.

“After media scrutiny and comparing the causes of that of the young woman who was killed in the Tokai forest at the same time as Mafevuka, the police started responding.”

The accused were arrested days after the Cape Times reported about the snail’s pace at which the police’s investigat­ion had been conducted, compared to that of 16-year-old Franziska Blöchliger, who was killed in Tokai Forest nearly a week after Sinoxolo’s murder.

Police acted swiftly and offered the grieving family counsellin­g.

Yesterday, police spokespers­on Andre Traut could not explain why Van Niekerk was removed only saying: “Kindly be advised that the Western Cape police is disappoint­ed with the outcome of the court proceeding­s, however we have no other option (but) to accept and respect the judgment.”

He said they were still in the process of studying the judgment.

ANEARLY two-year wait for closure by the family of teenager Sinoxolo Mafevuka, raped and murdered in a communal toilet a distance from their Khayelitsh­a home has been in vain.

Police have failed to do the basics in the early stages of their investigat­ion. As a result, the two men charged on Monday walked free from the Western Cape High Court.

The State had failed to prove its case beyond reasonable doubt, said Judge Taswell Papier. He was critical of the initial investigat­ing officer Cornelius van Niekerk for his handling of the investigat­ion. This officer was subsequent­ly removed from the case and another detective assigned. Why was he removed?

It emerged in court that besides not having the notes of his interview with the suspects after he apprehende­d them, Van Niekerk had not informed the suspects of their basic rights.

The evidence by state witnesses was also found to be contradict­ory.

Sinoxolo’s case is one of many left unresolved in townships, suggesting black lives still don’t matter 24 years into democracy.

We say this, because it had to take this publicatio­n to expose how police were not prioritizi­ng the killing, nine days later, for there to be some action. It prompted then deputy police minister Maggie Sotyu to visit the Khayelitsh­a police station to demand answers. Shortly after, police arrested the two men Papier has now been forced to acquit.

In what turned out to be an award-winning expose, (umlaut on e) which we had headlined “A tale of two cities”, we reported how the equally tragic murder at about the same time of a white teenager Franziska Blöchliger while jogging in Tokai forest had received vastly different treatment to Sinoxolo’s from the cops. Her parents had immediatel­y been provided with counsellin­g, Sinoxolo’s family not, until the Cape Times reported on it nine days later.

Franziska’s killers were quickly apprehende­d, convicted and jailed. Her family has closure. They have moved abroad. But the pain and heartbreak for the Mafevukas continues, with no end in sight.

We call on outspoken Police Minister Fikile Mbalula to put his money where his mouth is.

The time for talking and his constant tweeting must come to an end. We do not want to report about another Sinoxolo. So do something about it now.

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SINOXOLO MAFEVUKA

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