The Mercury

Show angers Anni’s family

- Ian Evans

CLOSE relatives of honeymoon murder victim Anni Dewani reacted angrily to a BBC programme that claimed the South African police investigat­ion into her death was flawed.

In the hour-long Panorama special broadcast last night in the UK, scientists said there was only a “cloud of suspicion” against Anni’s husband Shrien, “rather than any evidence”.

Professor of forensic science Jim Fraser told the programme: “This is not an investigat­ion that would meet the standards in this country (Britain). This is not what would be considered good practice.

“There are many things… that fall a long way short of effective investigat­ion.”

The BBC team obtained South African police files that make up the prosecutio­n case against Dewani, 33, who has been fighting extraditio­n back to Cape Town. He is in a mental hospital suffering from posttrauma­tic stress disorder and depression but has been deemed fit enough to return, depending on a Supreme Court hearing next month.

Police believe he hired hitmen to stage a bogus hijack in Gugulethu, Cape Town, before Anni, 28, was driven off and shot in 2010. Panorama reported that CCTV footage and phone records appeared to contradict parts of the account by their driver, Zola Tongo, who was jailed for 18 years after he admitted his part in the killing. Firearms expert Mark Mastaglio also told Panorama a wound in Anni’s hand suggested she was shot at close range during a struggle – contradict­ing police claims she was executed.

British Home Office pathologis­t Dr Richard Shepherd said blood would have splattered on the seat if Anni had been cowering back against it, making him think she was leaning or sitting forward.

However Ashok Hindocha, Anni’s uncle, said the programme was one-sided. He wanted a right of reply on camera in the documentar­y, which was rejected by the producers. Instead they asked him for a written response, which they said would be included in the programme, which he rejected.

Speaking from his home in Sweden, Hindocha said: “I wrote to the BBC and they came back to me at one or two in the morning with this suggestion, which I didn’t agree to. They’ve got so-called witnesses, but what they looked at was very narrow, like the gunshot wound.

“Did they know the taxi was moving at the time, and what would big men like that need to have a loaded gun with the safety catch off to scare little Anni?

“I’ve always trusted and respected the BBC, a big worldwide corporatio­n, but not after this. Their last programme was more balanced and we co-operated with it but we always asked them not to ask about the legal details because that is up to the courts. The only thing the BBC did agree to was not to show pictures of Anni’s hand.

“We’ve waited patiently for three years to see justice for Anni but onesided programmes like this add to the frustratio­n. It’s upsetting to my family because it’s not balanced. We still get hundreds of letters and emails asking about Anni and this programme just adds to the upset.”

Rodney de Kock, Western Cape director of prosecutio­ns, yesterday said the programme was “very unhelpful”. Speaking before the programme was broadcast, he said: “It is sub judice and we have to respect the rights of Mr Dewani to a fair trial. It would be wrong to give evidence via a television broadcast.

“I think it’s very unhelpful because the content they choose to use can be selective and the conclusion­s they draw can be the wrong.”

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