IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SWAZILAND
CRIM.
CASE. NO. 64/97
IN
THE MATTER BETWEEN
REX
VS
MUSA
MFANIMPELA FAKUDZE
CORAM
S.B. MAPHALALA - A
J
FOR
CROWN MR WACHIRA
FOR
DEFENCE IN PERSON
JUDGEMENT
(27/11/97)
You
are charged with two counts. On the first count you are charged with
the crime of culpable homicide. It is alleged by the crown that upon
or about the 24th August, 1996 at or near Mahleka Area in the
District of Lubombo. You unlawfully and wrongfully assaulted Lomali
Fakudze and inflicted upon her certain injuries which caused the
death of the said Lomali Fakudze on the 24th August, 1996 and you did
thereby commit the crime of culpable homicide. On the second count it
is alleged by the crown that you guilty of the crime of assault with
intent to do grievous bodily harm. It is alleged by the crown that on
the same day and at the same place you did unlawfully assaulted
Ncimezi Mhlanga, by hitting her with an open hand and kicking her
with the intention of causing grievous bodily harm. Before the trial
commenced the court wanted to find out whether you were going to
conduct your own defence where you indicated that you were going to
conduct your own defence because you were in financial dire strait.
You
pleaded not guilty to the charge of culpable homicide and guilty to
the crime of assault with intent to do grievous bodily harm. However,
the court being persuaded by the reasons given by Mr. Wachira for the
crown changed the plea in respect of the first count to that of not
guilty since you are not represented before court, so that you get a
chance to cross examine witnesses in this case. The crown then
proceeded to call a number of witnesses to prove its case and you in
turn cross-examine each and every one of those crown witnesses. At
the end of the crown case your rights were duly explained to you and
then you elected to make a swore statement. You related that you are
not the one responsible for the death of Gogo Fakudze, but it was the
blow that was delivered by
2
the
old lady who came and gave the evidence before this court, but you
did not deny that you inflicted injuries or assaulted the old lady
who came and gave evidence before the court.
The
court then entertained submissions as we have heard this morning by
the crown as well as by yourself. I am not going to go at length with
the analysis of the evidence in this case since the facts are still
fresh in our minds.
It
appears that when these offences were committed you were drinking
liquor all of you. Liquor was being brewed for purposes of appeasing
ancestors. One witness told the court that he was the one responsible
for the brewing of the liquor because he has been saved in the mines
from a certain calamity, and he was thankful to his ancestors for
protecting him there. It appeared from the evidence that was gathered
by the court that when this quarrel between yourself and the deceased
that you were both drunk, and it appears also from the facts before
me that there were insults that were hauled from you and also from
the deceased, and after insults they were blows that were exchanged
between the two of you. Later on, the old lady Gogo Mhlanga
intervened. She came with a small stick that has been presented as an
exhibit before this court. Evidence has been shown that the old lady
was trying to intervene when she was trying to intervene she
delivered the blow directed at you, but you ducked and that blow
landed on the deceased. The blow landed on the forehead of the
deceased. That blow is explained by a pathologist who gave evidence
who said that the deceased had blue eyes. However the crucial
evidence here in respect of count one I agree with Mr. Wachira is the
evidence of Sihle Fakudze. Sihle told the court that she saw you
after the lady delivered the blow to the deceased he saw you giving
the deceased an upper cut, and the deceased fell down after that she
never woke up from that fall. The evidence that has been led by the
pathologist still reflect that the cause of death was the internal
haemorrhage that was concentrated at the back of the head, and this
is consistence with the evidence that was given by Sihle Fakudze
which he did not challenge.
I
do not accept your feeble explanation that you were confused while
she was giving evidence before this court. The court even gave you a
chance to take a break and collect your thoughts, but you wanted to
proceed and you are not going to tell us now that you were confused
because the court did give you a chance to collect your yourself at
that stage I am not going to accept that.
I
agree in toto with what Mr. Wachira has said this morning in his
submission. I find you guilty in respect of both counts.
SENTENCE
I
have taken your personal circumstances into consideration in arriving
at a proper sentence in your case and I have also taken into
consideration your circumstances that surrounded the two incidences
that you are here for. It is clear from the evidence that the parties
that were involved in this rather unfortunate incident were under the
influence of liquor including yourself. It is also unfortunate that
the people that you inflicted injuries
3
are
your relatives and you are going to carry that burden for the rest of
your life that you killed your own aunt. That will stay with you for
the rest of your life and I think that will be in itself punishment.
I have also taken into consideration that you were in custody for
nine months until you were released by the court on your recognizane.
It is my view that the term of imprisonment or incarceration taught
you few things about life in jail. In your case I don't think that a
custodial sentence would be of any benefit, and I do not think
society will benefit from you if you are incarcerated. You are still
a young person, and to me what happened was unfortunate incident. I
am going to give you a sentence that I am going to suspend a large
portion of that sentence is going to be suspended, hoping that would
deter you from committing similar offences. Like it has been shown
here as Mr. Wachira rightly pointed out that you seem to be a short
tempered man. I hope that the sentence that I am going to impose is
going to help in tempering your short fuse. I am going to sentence to
seventy-two months imprisonment and I am going to suspend sixty-two
months for a period of three years on condition that you are not
convicted of an offence in which violence is an offence committed
during period of suspension.
I
have taken into consideration that the two counts form a single
transaction, and I have treated both of them as one for the purposes
of sentence. The sentence is backdated to the 25th August, 1997.
S.
B. MAPHALALA
ACTING
JUDGE