The Citizen (Gauteng)

Pieters accused back in court

-

Chanting protesters lined the street outside a court in Cape Town yesterday in anticipati­on of the second appearance of a man accused of the rape and murder of toddler Courtney Pieters.

As with the accused’s first appearance last Wednesday, the court room was packed with Cape Flats residents – in addition to those in the street outside.

Because of the rape charge, the accused, who is from Elsies River, may not be identified until his trial commences in the Western Cape High Court on charges of rape and murder.

He made his second appearance in the Goodwood District Court, before magistrate Paul Visagie, who remanded him in custody to August 24 to allow for further investigat­ion.

At the first court appearance, legal aid lawyer Colin Lekay told the court the man was employed at a call centre, and that his income exceeded the minimum allowed for free legal aid representa­tion.

At yesterday’s proceeding­s, the lawyer told the court that legal aid had since allowed his applicatio­n, but that the accused no longer wanted free legal aid representa­tion and had appointed a privately-funded lawyer.

This developmen­t compelled legal aid to withdraw from the matter, Lekay told the court.

At this stage, the accused did not want to bring an applicatio­n for his release on bail, the new lawyer told the court.

Prosecutor Adnaand Gelderbloe­m told the court that the investigat­ion was far from completed, and requested that the man be remanded in custody to August 24. – ANA

Kathmandu

Sherpas have found four climbers dead in their tents on Mount Everest, officials said yesterday, with suspicion they died of carbon monoxide poisoning, taking the death toll on the world’s highest mountain to 10 in the past month.

The climbers were found in two tents at Camp Four, at 8 000 metres, overnight, Mingma Sherpa of the Seven Summit Treks group, to which the sherpas belonged, said in Kathmandu.

It was not clear how they died and their identities had not been

The lawyer told the court the accused no longer wanted free legal aid representa­tion and had appointed a privately-funded lawyer.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa