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Muti Nation Page 4

by Monique Snyman


  A relative of Odette Boucher (11 when she disappeared), who wishes to remain anonymous, was hesitant when asked about the discovery.

  “I have so much sympathy for Carol-Anne’s mother,” she said, “but I doubt her murder is linked to Gert van Rooyen.”

  None of the families can be blamed for being sceptical. Over the years, their hopes have been raised countless times only to be dashed once more.

  In 2007, similar claims were made when the remains of some girls were found at Umdloti, KwaZulu-Natal, after massive storms unearthed bones along the coastline. These allegations, however, were proven to be false with the help of forensic testing and DNA analysis. That same year, the current affairs TV programme, Carte Blanche, reported claims by investigator Danie Krugel and clairvoyant Marietta Theunissen that the girls’ bodies were buried merely a few kilometres from Van Rooyen’s demolished home in Malherbe Street, but no conclusive evidence has been found to prove these claims either.

  Van Rooyen committed suicide in January 1990 after a police chase. According to reports, he first shot his lover and accomplice, Joey Haarhoff, and then himself.

  Kobie Wagenaar, whose daughter, Anne-Mari, went missing, said: “I really don’t know what to think any more.”

  Police spokesman lieutenant colonel Moses Dlamini said they cannot yet rule out the possibility that Carol-Anne Brewis’ murder is connected to the Gert van Rooyen cases.

  “Because of the sensitive nature of it, [Carol-Anne’s case] will receive top priority,” he said.

  Dlamini warned against speculation and asked the public to wait until all forensic tests had been completed. This could take weeks.

  — TimesLive

  Comments have been disabled for this article.

  ~

  12 Year Old Girl Found Dead at Van Rooyen’s House

  05 Sep 2015 10:07 5 Comments

  The body of Carol-Anne Brewis (12) was found at the home of paedophile Gert van Rooyen in Capital Park, Pretoria police said on Saturday.

  Lieutenant Colonel Moses Dlamini said a neighbour saw a suspicious van speeding away from the crime scene early Saturday morning and they immediately contacted the police.

  Homicide detectives and forensic experts visited the site and the material evidence will be sent for forensic testing, said Dlamini.

  “What we would like is to have the police’s work go unhindered. We know the country is waiting in anticipation for our results, and for us to find the person responsible—we ask for patience,” he said.

  Van Rooyen and his accomplice, and mistress, Joey Haarhoff, were linked to the disappearance of six girls between 1988 and 1990.

  They allegedly kidnapped Joan Horn (13), Odette Boucher (11), Anne-Marie Wapenaar (12), Yolande Wessels (12), Fiona Harvey (12), and Tracy-Lee Scott-Crossley (14).

  Van Rooyen killed Haarhof and then committed suicide in January 1990.

  — Mail & Guardian

  Comments:

  Rooney Kavanagh – 2 minutes ago

  Whoever’s responsible for Carol-Anne’s death is one sick puppy.

  Riana Smith – 2 minutes ago

  @Rooney Kavanagh – I was just thinking the same thing. What type of monster would not only kill a little girl, but also dump her body in the one place where so many other families’ entire lives were ruined. It’s horrific.

  Vincent – 2 minutes ago

  I think the killer did it on purpose, to make a name for himself.

  CascadingClive – two minutes ago

  Seriously screwed up.

  HelloKitty128 – 2 minutes ago

  This is one messed up world.

  Rachel Nkandla – a few seconds ago

  Couldn’t agree more. R.I.P. Carol-Anne.

  JazzMan – 2 minutes ago

  R.I.P. Carol-Anne.

  Henrico Kruger – 2 minutes ago

  Why do the media think Carol-Anne’s murder is related to cold cases from 23 years ago? Gert van Rooyen and Joey Haarhoff are both dead. Nobody’s proven they had any other accomplices. The conspiracy theories are just that: conspiracies. I don’t get it.

  Yvette Badenhorst – two minutes ago

  Maybe it’s because Carol-Anne’s body was found on Gert van Rooyen’s premises? We don’t know all the facts, that’s why those are cold cases. Maybe van Rooyen and Haarhoff DID have an accomplice and he/she was lying low until now?

  Jake Fugard – two minutes ago

  Maybe it’s a copy-cat killer?

  CascadingClive – 1 minutes ago

  @Jake Fugard – Yeah, my first thought was that it was a copy-cat killer, trying to get some attention.

  Yvette Badenhorst – 2 minutes ago

  @Jake Fugard – A copy-cat killer usually have something to copy. In this case, we don’t know for sure what happened to those girls. In other words, there’s nothing worth copying.

  Lovejoy Matsepe – 2 minutes ago

  The cops should give the killer to the people for 5 minutes. We don’t need more time than that.

  Harlequin49 – 2 minutes ago

  I heard the police called in an occult crime unit to help with the investigations. Can anyone confirm or deny this?

  Hannes Vermeulen – 2minutes ago

  @Harlequin49 – Well, we live in Malherbe Street, and I can confirm there were occult specialists on the premises, but they declined comments to every reporter they came across. I think the police want to keep their involvement in the case quiet.

  Francine White – 1 minute ago

  I wouldn’t put it past the police to call in specialists. The SAPS is up to &@^! except when they’re taking bribes. They can take bribes better than anyone else.

  ArmchairDetective – 1 minute ago

  Carol-Anne Brewis looks a lot like the type of girls Gert van Rooyen targeted back in the day. It’s eerie.

  [view image]

  RickyRockyRoad – a few seconds ago

  She DOES look a lot like Odette Boucher.

  Vincent – a few seconds ago

  Okay, that’s uber-creepy.

  Continue to Read Comments?

  ~

  Pink Ladies Show Up in Support of Carol-Anne Brewis

  September 5 2015 at 11:45 a.m. 25 Comments

  By Bianca Otto

  Pretoria has been in a state of uproar after officials discovered the body of twelve-year-old Carol-Anne Brewis earlier this morning, on the property once belonging to infamous paedophile, Gert van Rooyen.

  There was a heavy police presence at the scene as neighbours and concerned citizens flocked to the site to show their support. A row of police officers blocked off one part of Malherbe Street, creating a barrier between van Rooyen’s house and the upset crowd. Police vehicles lined the other side of the street, to keep the crowd at bay.

  Around nine o’clock, the Pink Ladies arrived, all dressed in pink T-shirts.

  The Pink Ladies, an organization of predominantly women who first started rallying against child abuse, child kidnappings and child murders when Sheldean Human went missing in 2007, arrived on the scene to show their support for Carol-Anne Brewis and her family.

  The colour pink was chosen by the Pink Ladies as Sheldean Human was last seen alive wearing a pink T-shirt and a denim skirt.

  Human’s decomposed body was found at a storm water drain outlet near the Tshwane Fresh Produce Market in 2007 two weeks after she had disappeared from outside her home in Pretoria Gardens. Andre Jordaan was tried and convicted of Human’s rape and murder and died in prison when another inmate attacked him.

  Sheldean’s name has become synonymous with the fight against crime in South Africa.

  “Today is a very sad day,” said Pink Lady, Lynette van der Graaff. “Not only does Carol-Anne remind us of the terrible deeds Gert van Rooyen committed back in the 1980s and 1990s, but little Sheldean wasn’t found too far from here either.”

  The Pink Ladies protested peacefully in Capital Park today, out of respect for Carol-Anne Brewis and her family.

  “This li
ttle girl was kidnapped out of her bed in the middle of the night. If children aren’t safe in their own homes, where are they safe?” said van der Graaff. “Enough is enough. The government needs to start listening to us and keep our babies safe.”

  — IOL News

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  Chapter 7

  It’s painful to be beautiful, but it’s absolute murder to be lionised.

  In life, Carol-Anne Brewis was just another impoverished child with an alcoholic for a mother and a deadbeat for a father. She shared the same origin story countless other children have to suffer through. What makes her special?

  Her future was not as bright as everyone claims it was. If she had been lucky, her parents might have enrolled her into one of the better schools on the other side of the Daspoort Tunnel. Maybe she would have kept her nose clean and gotten good enough grades to attend the University or the Technikon (highly unlikely from what he’d witnessed during the months he’d studied her). And if the stars were in her favour, perhaps Carol-Anne would have found herself a mediocre job somewhere, settled down with a mediocre man, and had herself a bunch of equally mediocre babies. Then the whole cycle would begin anew.

  She wasn’t going to cure AIDS, or perfect Nikola Tesla’s intercontinental wireless transmissions. She wasn’t going to be a supermodel unless she drastically altered her appearance with plastic surgery after she hit puberty. Her genetics simply weren’t up to par in that regard.

  No.

  If she had died when she was an old lady with a handful of regrets and a wasted life in her rear-view mirror, only close friends and family would mourn her. Eventually, though, even they would have forgotten her. No matter how badly people want to believe it, Carol-Anne Brewis was never going to amount to much.

  Thanks to him, Carol-Anne doesn’t have to be a disappointment to herself or to anyone else. She will be remembered. She will be celebrated.

  By all means, let her be the poster child for everything wrong in this country.

  He will admit this: there might not have been greatness residing within Carol-Anne, but there was power. He craved that power.

  For months, he had stalked the little girl. For weeks, he had searched for every vulnerable part of her parents’ property. For days, he’d contemplated taking her life—and ultimately her power.

  He’d almost released Carol-Anne after he’d devoured every bit of Valentine’s essence. Almost. He very nearly moved on to one of his other targets. But that was before he realised how badly he wanted to play his morbid game with Esmé Snyders.

  That’s her name—Esmé Snyders.

  She’s the one who’d exuded the greatness he’d been waiting for. She is worthy to play his game, even though she doesn’t know she’s already playing.

  He has big plans for her.

  Wonderful plans.

  Chapter 8

  Cicadas buzz in harmony as the African sun ascends to its peak. Sweat droplets accumulate on my upper lip and snake from my hairline down the back of my neck, causing hair and clothes to cling to skin. The air is uncomfortably stagnant, dry, and hotter than seven levels of hell. The warm breeze carries an echo of exhaust fumes with it. Whenever a large truck or Putco bus roars past sputtering carbon monoxide into the atmosphere, nature’s sounds are drowned out.

  The strange symphony of nature versus man offends my ears as I stand in the shade of a feeble looking tree. Fat blowflies sluggishly float through the sky, landing on my bare legs for a quick reprieve from their flight. They move only when I do and return as soon as I’m still.

  The sun-bleached road is lined with sun-bleached buildings dating back fifty years or more. People swarm amongst the informal vendors, weaving in and out for a chat or a smoke or a quick purchase of whatever is on sale. Taxis swerve dangerously across the lanes to pick up or unload passengers.

  Marabastad is the type of place Americans would describe as being “downtown.”

  But Marabastad isn’t anywhere near as dangerous or as frowned upon as Jo’burg’s inner-city slum, Hillbrow. It is however, the closest equivalent Pretoria has. There’s a lot of history here; mostly forgotten history but interesting stories surround the township.

  Formal businesses are situated in the old rundown buildings, sharing customers with informal vendors on the sidewalks—often run by refugees from diverse backgrounds. Vacant lots have been turned into mini-shantytowns by the destitute, where corrugated metal gleams atop unsound structures built from plywood, plastic and cardboard. It’s a poverty-stricken neighbourhood where you can find knockoffs of anything. Here, drugs of every flavour are available if you know who to ask. Shops sell poorly made clothes at cheap prices, because South Africa has turned into China’s product dumping site. Chop-shops hide in the backyards of proper businesses, but everyone who grows up around these parts know what’s happening after the taxman leaves. You can find a new identity, citizenship, a hit-man, or anything black-market for a relatively good price.

  People eyeball me whenever I walk around Marabastad by myself. I can only speculate on their thoughts when unsubtle glances, filled with suspicion or surprise or curiosity, get my attention. Proper white girls don’t walk around here without a chaperone. Usually said chaperone is classified as a bullish Boer with a rattan cane lying somewhere in his oversized pick-up truck—a bakkie.

  Good thing I’m not entirely proper.

  Truthfully, the only reason I ever come to Marabastad is when I meet with one of my informants who trades between Marabastad and Hillbrow. Her name is Feyisola, or so she claims. I don’t care. As long as she gets me information on illegal human organ and body part trade, I’ll call her whatever she wants. Feyisola’s information is expensive but her tips pan out. The only problem I have with the arrangement is the risk we take every time we meet.

  She works with shady characters; the type who kill first and don’t give two shits later.

  I walk across the street to a small tailor shop located in a relatively busy side street. The shop is dark and smells musky when I pass through the front door, but the heat overwhelms all of my other senses. I greet the shop owner with a flash of teeth and a half wave but she turns her back on me to busy herself with clothes on a rack, like always. I don’t take it personally. Clandestine meetings frequently occur in the shop’s back room and this is her way of saying she doesn’t want to become more involved. I respect that.

  The back room, which is even darker, hotter and muskier than the front, is separated with a curtain of beads and a wooden accordion door. Not very secure if you ask me, but it’s not like I have a say in where we meet. Maybe she’d be open to meeting at the Casbah Roadhouse across from the Pretoria Show Grounds, at least then there’s the option of air-conditioning. Here there are no windows and no back doors. There’s only the ancient plastic patio furniture squeezed into the tiny room where Feyisola waits with stale biscuits and cheap cool-drink.

  She’s dressed in a crimson pantsuit paired with a sheer black camisole underneath her jacket. I’m certain if her shoes were in view I’d covet them. Feyisola’s plump lips are coloured in scarlet and twitch into an uncomfortable smile when I approach. Fake eyelashes brush against high cheekbones whenever she blinks.

  Feyisola is drop dead sexy and painfully intelligent. It’s best not to get on her bad side. She knows people, the type of people you don’t want to run into in the middle of the night.

  “Juice,” she asks in an indistinct accent. A manicured hand waves across the perspiring glass jug when I take a seat beside her.

  “No, thank you,” I reply.

  Feyisola’s face smooths out and she shifts in her seat. “I would have sent a text, but you know how it goes.”

  She doesn’t have to continue. A message delivered via courier works just as well as a text.

  “Don’t worry about it,” I say in the most reassuring tone I can muster. “What do you have for me today?”

  Feyisola leans closer and begins in a hushed voice. “When I he
ard about the girl and woman who recently got killed, I asked around town about any dealings you might be interested in. Turns out, none of the usual suspects are involved. I did, however, learn of a large shipment of body parts making its way into the country from Namibia.”

  “When?”

  “In the next few days,” she says. “From what I gather, the shipment is expected to be distributed from Johannesburg to various parts of Southern Africa.” She slides a small manila envelope across the table. “Some names you might want to look into.”

  I pocket the envelope without looking at its contents. “Do you think the killer placed an order?”

  “I have no way of knowing but your killer took a chance by murdering a white child. Ain’t no way the police will let that shit fly,” Feyisola says, her accent shifts to something resembling a lower-class American gangster’s dialect, without her realising. She sits back in her chair. “I also heard your grandfather will be back in town next week.”

  I raise an eyebrow and purse my lips together in disapproval. My grandfather is off-limits.

  “Don’t worry. He’s got a reputation as a bad ass. Nobody will fuck around with him.”

  “Good,” I mutter, not bothering to correct her on my grandfather’s true persona, which is as far from bad-ass as it gets.

  “You, on the other hand, are considered to be fair game.” She twirls a braided weave around one of her fingers while she regards me. “Good thing you haven’t stepped on any crime lords’ toes.”

  “The narcotics unit can deal with the drugs, I’m not interested.”

  “More than drugs are smuggled into the country.”

  “Yes, but unless there’s a shipment of cursed voodoo dolls coming into South Africa, I really don’t need to know about it.” I stand. These meetings need to be kept sweet and short if they are to be beneficial to both parties. “How much do I owe you?”

 

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