Saturday Star

Could well in Pretoria hold girls’ remains?

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From Page 1

This was in the 1950s and Van Rooyen, who would 30 years later be linked to the disappeara­nce of six schoolgirl­s, had even then a reputation of someone to be feared.

The young Van Rooyen, according to the brothers who knew him, was also bombastic and elusive.

Little is known about Van Rooyen’s childhood, but Leon Vermaakt believes Bloed Street and its surrounds might hold clues that could help police understand the paedophile, and finding the site of an old well might hold an even darker secret.

This year is the 30th anniversar­y of Van Rooyen and his girlfriend

Joey Haarhoff’s deaths and with this has come renewed calls for the cold case to be solved and the remains of the girls to be found.

In the 1950s Bloed Street was far different to what it is today. Rows of lower-middle-income houses lined the street a stone’s throw from the heart of the capital city. It was a rough neighbourh­ood, where violence was commonplac­e and even murders spilled on to the streets.

Leon Vermaakt was born on Van der Poel Street in 1945 and said as a boy he knew of the Van Rooyens, who lived a block away.

“I used to walk to school, past the Van Rooyen house. Their door was always closed,” recalls Vermaakt.

“With Gert, one day you would see him, then you wouldn’t. He didn’t play with us.” The Vermaakt brothers were forbidden by their parents from playing with the Van Rooyens. They found out why.

But the Vermaakt brothers were friends with Van Rooyen’s brother, Johnny.

“He told us that there were eight people living in that house.”

Back then, not far from Bloed Street was an open piece of ground where the children used to play. Close by was a well.

“The well was quite deep, I used to throw stones in there. Eventually they put metal sheets over and put rocks on it to hold them in place, so children wouldn’t fall in there,” says Vermaakt.

He recalls seeing Van Rooyen at the well.

It is believed that the well was still there in the 1980s.

Vermaakt’s brother, Ferdi, points out that a psychic once told the police that the missing girls had been dumped in a pit that was two kilometres west of his Capital Park home. This site, he said, was two kilometres south of Capital Park.

Leon didn’t have much to do with the older Van Rooyen, but there was an incident that showed perhaps a glimmer of the violence the future criminal would become famous for.

One Saturday, Vermaakt was playing close to the banks of the Apies River when he was hit in the forehead with a bolt, fired from a catapult. He still has the scar today.

“When I looked up I saw Van Rooyen and two other boys. I couldn’t see who had the catapult, so I don’t know who fired it.”

The Vermaakts left the neighbourh­ood soon afterwards and lost contact with the Van Rooyens.

Since then Bloed Street has changed. The houses are gone.

Where the well once stood is now the site of the Bloed Street Mall and Vermaakt wonders if maybe groundpene­trating radar might be able to find the site, and ascertain if there is anything in there.

Gert van Rooyen also left Bloed Street. In 1979 he abducted two girls aged 10 and 13 and sexually assaulted them. He later released them and was arrested and sentenced to four years’ imprisonme­nt.

In the late 1980s he is believed to have abducted six girls. The seventh girl was able to escape and, when police caught up with him, he shot his partner Haarhoff before turning the gun on himself.

Vermaakt said he did see Van Rooyen after he left Bloed Street. “He was in Capital Park in a bakkie with Haarhoff. I didn’t greet him.”

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