http://www.mg.co.za/articledirect.aspx?articleid=294942&area=%2fbreaking_new
s%2fbreaking_news__national%2f

 

National 

 

 

'Surge in contract killings' 

 

Monako Dibetle and Kwanele Sosibo | Johannesburg, South Africa  

 

04 Jan 2007 23:59 

 

The recent arrest of Mulalo Sivhidzo in connection with the murder of
Avhatakali Netshisaulu, the son of City Press editor Mathatha Tsedu, points
to a possible national surge in contract killings, analysts say. 

 

Netshisaulu's wife of several months, Sivhidzo, is alleged to have
contracted several men to carry out the brutal murder last month of her
husband, which was made to look like a carjacking. 

 

Last December, the execution-style murder of Cape Town entertainer Taliep
Pietersen in his fortified home in Athlone was initially made to look like a
robbery. Although arrests have yet to be made, his wife, Najwa, is
understood to have been questioned several times by the police. The couple
were said to be having marital problems at the time of his death. 

 

Elrena van der Spuy of the University of Cape Town's criminology department
said that while contract killings are not a new phenomenon, they have sprung
into public consciousness because they are increasingly being used to settle
personal matters. "It has infiltrated into an intimate setting," she
continued. "People involved in interpersonal affairs are turning into
assassins." 

 

Van der Spuy added that, in general, contract killings could be separated
into two categories: those carried out professionally, usually to settle an
economic dispute involving a substantial sum of money, and those carried out
with less discretion and usually driven by emotion. 

 

Criminal-law specialist William Booth said that people were hiring killers
more because, "subconsciously they believe it will remove them from the
scene; it will throw suspicion away from them because it would be the word
of a criminal against theirs". 

 

Speculating on the reasons behind this perceived surge, which has been
acknowledged by several senior police officials who spoke to the Mail &
Guardian off the record, Booth said that the country's socio-economic
conditions could be a factor, but the media was also not blameless. "It
could be that the media is focusing more on this type of crime because the
people involved in it are usually high profile. But how many more such
murders happen in South Africa and nobody knows about them?" 

 

He added that the majority of contract killers approached in South Africa
were not professional marksmen and did it purely out of desperation. 

 

Although women feature prominently in the recent spate of contract killings,
a study done in 2000 by the Centre for the Study of Violence and
Reconciliation revealed that for every woman who kills her partner, four men
kill their partners. According to the study, of all domestic murder cases
that make it to court, only 5% were motivated by economic gain. Most
murders, the study showed, happen within the context of domestic violence. 

 

However, recent cases suggest that money is increasingly the main motivation
behind those who hire contract killers. Last month Christina Molokomme, a
Polokwane police officer, was arrested for allegedly conspiring in the
kidnapping of her husband, Scorpions detective Phillip Molokomme. The plot
was conceived after Molokomme came across information detailing the benefits
payable to her in the event of her husband's death. Two hired hit men are
alleged to have used Molokomme's police-issue firearm and her remote control
and door keys to gain access to their home. 

 

Police were tipped off about the plot and managed to come to Molokomme's
rescue after he had been kidnapped. His wife was subsequently arrested for
conspiring in the kidnapping. 

 

In another incident, Albert Mojapelo was murdered by three hit men in
September 2005 in Orange Farm, the day before he was to receive R1-million
in retirement and pension payouts. The incident was made to look like a
carjacking. His wife, Tinky Mojapelo, her friend, Antoinette Masuku, and an
alleged Mozambican hit man, Orlando Mandoza, were subsequently arrested for
Mojapelo's murder and kidnapping. 

 

The Mojapelos were said to have been experiencing marital difficulties and
Albert was reportedly threatening to file for divorce. Tinky and Masuku have
since been released on R5 000 bail each, while Mandoza remains in police
custody. 

 

In 2004 Kgomotso Tladi of Middelburg in Mpumalanga paid three hit men a
whopping R450 000 "to scare" her pharmacist husband Andrew Tladi. Andrew's
executioners carjacked and shot him dead in the boot of his luxury sedan in
Groblersdal on December 3. 

 

In her confession of the crime in November last year, Tladi told the
Middelburg Circuit Court that her husband wanted her to relocate to
Polokwane with him against her will. She claimed to have hired three hit men
only to persuade him to reconsider his decision. 

 

She now faces charges of kidnapping and murder, together with her
co-conspirators, Eva Sithole, Gilbert Makhubela and Samson Mogalaka. 

 

According to Van der Spuy, the circumstances surrounding each contract
killing vary, ranging from settling scores between estranged lovers to
ousting enemies in political turf wars. 

 

"I think it says what we already know," said Van der Spuy, about the meaning
of these cases. "That South Africans love violence and are using it more
readily." 

 

 



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