Motshekga thinks literacy is overrated; Malema proves it isn't; and Vavi blames apartheid.
Co-accused reveals more
Article By:
Wed, 13 Aug 2008 17:17
One of Najwa Petersen's co-accused told the Cape High Court on
Wednesday that she and her family made repeated attempts to persuade
him not to incriminate her in the murder of her husband Taliep.
The claim came from Waheed Hassen at the end of a day in which he
dramatically demonstrated to the court how Najwa allegedly fired the
shot that killed Taliep in December 2006.
Hassen told judge Siraj Desai that since he was first taken into
custody, Najwa had been trying to get him to "talk her out of the
case".
She made two approaches in the Wynberg Magistrate's Court cells,
once through a convict, and the second time directly to him.
Hassen said the man from whom he borrowed the gun used to kill
Taliep, Sedick Kriel, had also been told that Najwa's brother Waleed
Dirk wanted to know how much money it would take for Hassen not to
incriminate his sister.
He had reported the approaches to the police. Hassen, who is accused
number three in
the trial, took the stand on Wednesday morning to
confess his role in the December 2006 slaying — and to implicate
Najwa.
Speaking about the killing
Though his version of events was already known to the court through
extensive written statements to police, this was the first time he had
spoken in a public arena about the killing.
Hassen said Fahiem Hendricks, an acquaintance of Najwa's who had
turned state witness, told him an "old friend of his" was having
problems with her husband and wanted him dead.
The husband beat her, cheated on her and got on her nerves.
Hendricks had said the woman — who turned out to be Najwa — would
let Hassen into the Petersen's Athlone home, and that the murder had to
look like an armed robbery gone wrong.
The woman was offering R70 000 for the killing, which was raised to
R100 000 when Hassen protested it was not enough to pay legal bills if
things went wrong.
Hassen,
who several times during his testimony battled to control
his emotions, said that although he agreed to do the job, he had
intended only to beat the husband to teach him a lesson.
On the night of 16 December 2006, he and co-accused Jefferson
Snyders went to the Grasmere Street home and bound Taliep with cable
ties.
Najwa embraced Taliep
Najwa came out of a bedroom and first tried to embrace Taliep —
which Taliep rejected with a head butt—then held his cheeks and
kissed him.
"He was crying. He was crying like a person who is crying inside,"
Hassen said.
As Hassen went round the house collecting items of value to make it
look like a robbery, Najwa kept demanding that he finish the job.
"You must shoot him. You must shoot him tonight," she allegedly told
him.
"I thought the woman was desperate that the man be killed because
she asked me repeatedly to do it," he said.
Hassen said he
fetched a flat upholstery cushion from a cupboard,
and folded it over the borrowed gun.
With props — a green cushion which he said was similar to the one
used on the night, a police-issue 9mm parabellum and a court orderly
acting the role of Najwa — he showed the court how she allegedly
reached over his left arm and pulled the trigger.
He was looking away at the time, he said.
After the shot he panicked, locked Najwa in a bedroom, and left.
"I did not know where the bullet hit the deceased and if he was dead
or alive," he said.
It is common cause that Taliep was killed by a shot to the back of
the neck.
Hassen said that driving away from the scene of the killing with
Snyders, he extracted the spent cartridge from the gun, where it had
become jammed, and chewed on it before spitting it out into the
roadside darkness.
"I was frustrated, because I did not go there with the intention
that anyone should be killed," he
said.