DURBAN — A former South African councillor Vusi Khoza, who was given a three-year suspended sentence on Monday for public violence and conspiracy to commit assault, could be angling for a return to politics.
Report by IoL
Khoza had been charged with public violence and conspiracy to commit assault in connection with xenophobic attacks in Durban in 2009.
His co-accused, Sean Jacobs, who faced charges of attempted murder and malicious damage to property, was sentenced to five years imprisonment on each charge.
Two foreigners, Victor Zowa of Zimbabwe and Said Omari of Tanzania, were killed after a mob entered a building in the Durban central business district and began attacking people. Zimbabwean Eugene Madondo was severely injured.
Magistrate Fariedha Mohamed said in passing sentence that Khoza and Jacobs were “lucky” not to have been charged in connection with the two deaths.
She described the attack as xenophobic, saying the mob had trespassed into the building looking for foreigners – not anyone else.
The charges against Jacobs were serious, but his personal circumstances were taken into account for purposes of sentencing, Mohamed said.
- Chamisa under fire over US$120K donation
- Mavhunga puts DeMbare into Chibuku quarterfinals
- Pension funds bet on Cabora Bassa oilfields
- Councils defy govt fire tender directive
Keep Reading
Co-accused Patricia Ballanyne was acquitted two weeks ago while a fourth accused, Mzokuthoba Mngonyama, was acquitted in August.
In mitigation of sentence, Khoza testified that the amount of media coverage his case had received had caused him humiliation and stripped him of his dignity, especially when he was referred to as a “war general” in one newspaper report.
“I was paraded as a vigilante who goes around killing people,” he said.
“It (the media coverage) also impacted on my family and my children at school.”