Anni Dewani dad’s arm ripped off. Zuma wants pregnant moms on Robben Island. You can’t feel fat on Facebook anymore. Whale kills woman landing on boat. Massive Apple iTunes outage. Exclusive New York sex parties.
So Shrien Dewani is a free man and shall go back to England and live happily ever after, which won’t be that easy. Either way, it has caused some angry responses in Cape Town.
After six weeks in the courtroom, Shrien Dewani has finally heard the fate of his future. Is he free? Is he doomed to years in prison? The answer is here.
It’s a battle for trial of the year between Oscar and Shrien – who’s coming out on top? Maybe Shrien, because of the bisexual bomb he dropped?
Now that Oscar’s trial is over, I am so enthralled by what is happening with Mr Dewani. I think the two cases are so similar – how will we ever really know what happened? There are so many sides to the story.
And the plot thickens in the Dewani murder trial. A new witness, a new story. I see the making of a sequel for The Life of David Gale…
As Shrien Dewani’s trial makes headlines again, evidence is scrutinised and questioned over and over. This is what Tongo, the taxi driver, explains.
Shrien Dewani’s defence team gave the state’s ballistics expert a seriously hard time in court, pushing him to admit he had made mistakes.
I can’t wait to hear more about the Dewani trial. With admissions of being bi-sexual, and an admissions list a mile long, it’s going to be a surprise a day.
It is never ending court room dramas for South Africa this year – here’s what Shrien Dewani has been saying in court.
With Shrien’s trial set to start in October (after three years of postponement), it seems like the waiting period for selling the evidence in the case has also elapsed and the scene of the murder has a new owner…
Four years and endless to-ing and fro-ing later Shrien Dewani is Finally here and apparently looking fit to stand trial in as soon as a month. Check out his toothy grin…
South Africans have another highly anticipated court drama on their hands. With the Pistorius trial reaching fever pitch, the trial of Shrien Dewani may be the next high profile case to enjoy airtime on the small screen.
That is correct. Shrien Dewani will very likely be staying in Valkenberg after he lands in South Africa from 8 April to stand trial for the murder of his wife, Anni Dewani. Shrien will enjoy a direct overnight flight from London to Cape Town. Upon landing he’ll be transferred straight to the High Court, where he’ll be charged in the presence of his lawyer.
Reports coming out of the UK are that murder-accused Shrien Dewani has lost his appeal against an extradition order that would see him flown to South Africa to stand trial for the 2010 murder of his wife, Anni Dewani. This, from EWN: In July 2013 Shrien Dewani lodged an appeal with the Supreme Court in […]
New evidence has surfaced in the murder case of Anni Dewani. A series of text messages have been revealed expressing how she felt about her husband and the anguish she felt while she was with him. This is the first evidence to prove Anni was unhappy in her marriage, when she was murdered in a car hijacking in 2010.
While the Westminster Magistrate’s Court has ruled that Dewani ought to be extradited to South Africa to face trial for orchestrating the 2010 murder of Anni Dewani, Shrien Dewani’s legal team has appealed the decision.
Moments ago, judgement in a crucial aspect of the Anni Dewani murder case was delivered. Xolile Mngeni, 25, has been found guilty of shooting Anni Dewani dead just over two years ago.
Inconsistencies in evidence that do not acquit Shrien Dewani, but rather raise many more questions than answers, have come to light recently.
The State’s first witness took the stand on Wednesday in the Cape High Court as part of Xolile Mngeni’s trial. Mngeni is accussed of firing the fatal shot that killed Anni.
In a previously unheard story that’s been laid out in a signed confession document and accepted by the Cape High Court, Mziwamadoda Qwabe claimed he was told that businessman Shrien Dewani “wanted the wife killed” and that it had to look like a robbery.
The British high court has ruled that Shrien Dewani’s extradition to South Africa to face murder charges for orchestrating the honeymoon murder of his wife, Anni, should be halted due to his poor mental health. Dewani’s legal team was appealing an extradition order signed by Home Secretary, Theresa May.
The extradition from Britain to South Africa of widower and murder suspect, Shrien Dewani, has been confirmed by British authorities. Dewani now has 14 days to lodge an appeal against the finding. Should Dewani be refused the right of appeal, he will be passed into the custody of South African authorities, where he will await […]
Shrien Dewani’s multi-week tenure at Priory Hospital for treatment following a suicide attempt, has come to an end. Dewani has been moved to a “stricter” mental health facility, after he engaged in a “heated discussion” with a female patient.
Shrien Dewani has been hospitalised after taking an overdose of unspecified pills in an apparent suicide attempt. Dewani, who was absent from both of his extradition hearings due to “medical ailments”, has reportedly lost over 12 kilograms since allegations of his contract killing of his wife emerged in November 2010.
The story broke on the Mail & Guardian, and needless to say, it’s being picked up all over the globe. Police sources in Cape Town allege that there is high resolution, colour video footage of Shrien Dewani handing driver Zola Tongo a bankie of cash in the restaurant area of the Cape Grace Hotel.
For your reading pleasure: The criminal indictment of the taxi driver who has since been sentenced to 18 years in prison for the murder of Anni Dewani. The 32 page document includes allegations of Zola’s employment as a hit man by Shrien Dewani, Anni’s husband. You can download it after the jump.
The investigation of the murder of Anni Dewani, a newly married British tourist who was gunned down in Gugulethu last month, has taken a spicy twist this afternoon. Yes, you can all roll your eyes and gesticulate wildly. Feel free to throw in a “I told you so” if you like.