The Herald (Zimbabwe)

BOY (9) MURDERS SISTER:

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A NINE-YEAR-OLD girl from Lupane allegedly teamed up with her Grade One neighbour and tied her four-yearold sister’s hands and legs with strips of bark before beating her to death with a stick.

The older children allegedly left the body in a bush and went home as if nothing had happened.

The names of the children have been withheld for ethical reasons.

Villagers organised a search party after the four-year-old ECD pupil at Ndwande Primary School, failed to return home on Monday.

Her sister allegedly did not tell her grandmothe­r (50), name also withheld to protect the identity of the minors, that her sibling was no more as villagers franticall­y organised a search party.

Villagers said the elder sister often told her friends she hated her younger sibling because she pretended to be better than everyone else, simply because she had come from South Africa.

The tragedy occurred between 3pm and 6pm on Monday and the villagers found the body around midnight on the same day.

The two siblings’ parents are both based in South Africa.

Our Bulawayo Bureau arrived at Ndwande Village under Chief Mabhikwa around 1pm yesterday, moments after police had taken the body away. The granny could hardly speak. She rallied herself and said both girls had bunked lessons on Monday as she had travelled to Lupane Centre for some business.

“As soon as I arrived home around 6pm I noticed that the younger girl was missing and I asked her sister about her whereabout­s,” she said. “She said she didn’t know where her sister was. I relaxed a bit thinking she was at one of our neighbours’ homes.

“As it became darker, I got worried and started looking for her at our neighbour’s house. The Grade One boy eventually revealed they had left her sleeping in the bush.”

The grandmothe­r said the fouryear-old girl had recently been sent home from South Africa, while she had lived with the older one since she was a baby.

“I returned home and questioned the elder sister about her sibling’s whereabout­s. She fled from the house. We discovered her sleeping in the pigsty early this morning,” said the grandmothe­r.

“With my husband, we interrogat­ed the Grade One boy. He told us the older girl tied her sister’s hands and legs together and they beat her up until she looked dead. He directed us to the scene where we found her lifeless body.”

A neighbour, Mr Themba Ncube, said villagers were shaken by the incident.

“The younger boy didn’t realise they had killed someone or done something bad,” he said. ‘That’s why he explained, in a rather excited manner, what they had done while the older one vanished from home.

“The boy explained, demonstrat­ing how they had beaten his neighbour up. He said when she stopped moving they tried to carry her, but she was too heavy.”

The children, he said, grabbed the younger girl’s legs and dragged her for about 250 metres.

He said they eventually gave up, dumped the body and went to their homes.

Ndwande Primary School developmen­t committee chairperso­n Mr Never Ngwenya said what the children had done was shocking and unbelievab­le.

“They will both need serious counsellin­g,” said Mr Ngwenya.

Teachers at Ndwane Primary School expressed shock on the incident, saying the deceased girl had enrolled at the school about two months ago.

The police Victim Friendly Unit took the two children to Lupane Police Station.

Villagers said the elder sister often told her friends she hated her younger sibling because she pretended to be better than everyone else, simply because she had come from South Africa.

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