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Shrien Dewani acquitted: Anni Dewani's family say South African justice system has failed them

Her relatives had pleaded with the court not to let the trial collapse

Lizzie Dearden
Monday 08 December 2014 08:00 EST
Shrien and Anni Dewani
Shrien and Anni Dewani

Anni Dewani’s family have seen their “nightmare” come true as Shrien Dewani walks free after being cleared of arranging her murder.

Her parents and siblings were in court today to hear the case against Mr Dewani be dismissed as the judge found that the prosecution’s evidence fell “far below the threshold” of what a reasonable court could convict on.

Mrs Dewani’s family had led public appeals for Judge Jeanette Traverso not to let the case collapse, saying it would be their worst “nightmare” for the trial to finish before her husband had even taken the stand.

They immediately left the courtroom after Monday’s verdict was delivered, venting their anger on the steps outside.

In a statement, the Hindocha family added: “We feel really, really sad because we have not heard the full story. Shrien lived a double life.”

He had admitted his bisexuality during the case and having affairs with men, which prosecution lawyers attempted to argue gave him cause to plot his wife’s murder to escape the relationship.

Mrs Dewani, 28, was shot dead after being abducted from a taxi travelling through a township near Cape Town on her honeymoon in November 2010.

Her husband was dumped from the vehicle unharmed but she was found dead the next day.

Three men were jailed over her murder but claimed Mr Dewani paid them to kill his wife and make it look like a hijacking.

Judge Traverso today found that key evidence was “so improbable, with so many mistakes, lies and inconsistencies you cannot see where the lies ended and the truth begins”.

Shrien Dewani sits in the dock before the start of his trial at the Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
Shrien Dewani sits in the dock before the start of his trial at the Western Cape High Court, Cape Town (EPA)

She allowed an application from Mr Dewani’s defence team that the case should be dismissed, saying the quality of evidence made it impossible for the trial to continue.

The Hindochas had begged Mr Dewani to “tell the world what happened the night she died”, with her brother Anish imploring him to take to the witness stand and tell his story for the first time.

Mr Dewani, who can now return to the UK a free man, breathed a large sigh of relief as Judge Traverso cleared him but was otherwise impassive.

Members of his family wept and embraced as the wealthy businessman, from Bristol, swiftly left the dock.

The case, coming just months after the controversial Oscar Pistorius trial, where the athlete was found guilty of manslaughter but not murder for shooting Reeva Steenkamp dead, has provoked protests across South Africa.

Campaigners held it up as another example of alleged violence against women going unpunished but Judge Traverso said it would be unjust for public opinion to influence any court.

“If any court admitted public opinion or emotion to affect their judgement, there would be anarchy,” she added.

Reeva Steenkamp’s parents backed Mrs Dewani’s family last week to call on Mr Dewani to give evidence in court.

Barry and June Steenkamp called the victim’s family to express their sympathy and back their calls for the trial to continue, the Daily Mail reported.

In a call to Mrs Dewani’s father Vinod Hindocha, Mr Steenkamp reportedly said his family understood what they were going through.

Mr Hindocha told the Daily Mail: “Mr Steenkamp and I talked about Reeva and Anni and I gave him my sympathy too.

“Only he and I as fathers can properly understand the pain of losing a daughter to bullets and then experience very difficult and high profile cases.

“Reeva's father told me 'we are both in the same boat' and that I needed to be strong.”

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