Incompetence or conspiracy – AfriForum’s Private Prosecution Unit wants answers on DA councillor’s assassination
1 October 2024
Nearly a year after Democratic Alliance (DA) councillor Nhlahlayenza Ndlovu was mercilessly gunned down in front of his family, the case has neither been solved nor have the police provided his grieving family with any meaningful update to suggest they’re any closer to catching the killers. AfriForum’s Private Prosecution Unit, which represents Ndlovu’s family, has now approached the Police Ministry to intervene following the abject failure by SAPS Crime Intelligence, its leadership and the so-called Political Task Team to make in-roads.
Assassins murdered the uMngeni Municipality’s chief whip in front of his wife and children on 4 December last year. He was shot more than ten times. In January, the DA’s Independent Task selected the unit as its operational partner to lead the investigation into Ndlovu’s murder, and it was formally briefed to provide support and legal assistance to the slain councillor’s family. Since January the unit, led by Adv. Gerrie Nel and supported by its senior investigators, has conducted extensive consultations and followed up on numerous promising leads in the uMngeni area.
In April the unit announced that it had secured potentially critical evidence that could solve the investigation but Major General Dumisani Khumalo, head of police Crime Intelligence, shut down all communication with the unit and, in effect, the victims of this heinous crime.
Now, in a letter to the newly-appointed police minister, Senzo Mchunu, his deputy and police management, Adv. Nel, has raised serious questions about the status of the investigation. “We reiterate that the unilateral decision that SAPS not communicate in a meaningful way with the widow of an assassinated councillor amounts to a grave dereliction of duty and may even be an admission of the inability to respond to the issues dealt with in our letter dated 19 March 2024.