Cape Argus

Najwa Dirk granted parole

- GENEVIEVE SERRA genevieve.serra@inl.co.za

NAJWA Dirk, the woman who was the mastermind behind her husband, Cape music legend Taliep Petersen’s murder nearly 18 years ago, has been granted parole – a decision met with relief and disappoint­ment as his siblings say they are considerin­g an appeal.

It is understood Dirk will face strict parole conditions, which the Department of Correction­al Services (DCS) have yet to confirm.

These include whether she is deemed a flight risk, or will be under house arrest. Dirk was sentenced to 28 years behind bars for the December 16, 2006, murder of Petersen at their Grasmere Street home in Athlone.

During the murder trial, Dirk pleaded not guilty, claiming robbers shot and killed Petersen.

She faced the parole board yesterday, after months of attending sessions with social workers, psychologi­sts and psychiatri­sts, while reports from criminolog­ists, which formed part of the Correction­al Services Parole Board process, were submitted to evaluate and assess her emotional and mental state.

Correction­al Services national spokespers­on, Singabakho Nuxumalo, said their office was yet to receive confirmati­on of the decision.

“Parole boards are mandated to send us the reports after completing parole considerat­ion sessions. We have no report on Najwa by the parole board as yet,” Nuxumalo said.

Parole officials are also expected to carry out a Community Imbizo engagement in Athlone soon, but have yet to provide details.

Petersen’s daughters, Fatiema Petersen, A’eesha Petersen, his sister, Maatoema Groenmeyer, her husband Naasief Groenmeyer, brother, Igshaan Petersen and Dirk’s family including her son, Sulaiman Effendi, have all been part of the parole proceeding­s until it reached its climax yesterday, with the news that she had been granted parole.

Yesterday, Fatiema and A’eesha said they were still trying to process the news and could not speak yet.

The daughters previously told the Cape Argus sister publicatio­n, the

Weekend Argus, during an exclusive interview, that they had forgiven Dirk and that she needed help psychologi­cally.

The daughters said they needed to set themselves free of the hate and resentment for the sake of their baby sister, Zaynub Petersen, who still needed her mother.

They added that Dirk had given them closure during the Victim Offender Dialogue in August, where she admitted she had “a partial involvemen­t” in their father’s murder, and if she did not allow a dodgy deal to be brought to their home, none of it would have happened.

Maatoema Groenmeyer told the Cape Argus yesterday that the news was overwhelmi­ng and they would be seeking legal counsel to oppose it.

“We are disgusted and appalled at the decision of the parole board,” she said.

“If they say she is a flight risk, then why give her parole?

“I am trying to wrap my head around it. My brother Igshaan is not happy. He told the chairperso­n ‘you’ve made your decision and I will appeal it’. Where is the justice?

“Even the criminolog­ist and psychologi­st’s report found her not to be remorseful and still in denial that she was the mastermind and very manipulati­ve.

“My brother did not get the justice he deserved; she spent 16 years as a convicted prisoner.”

Maatoema added that Dirk had been given another lifeline while Petersen’s children were robbed of their father.

“She will be under house arrest and there are a lot of conditions attached to her parole such as they see her as a flight risk,” she said.

Dirk's co-accused, Waheed Hassen, received 25 years imprisonme­nt.

Abdoer Emjedi, also a co-accused, was sentenced to 24 years behind bars in 2009 and served his minimum term after being convicted of murder and robbery with aggravatin­g circumstan­ces. Emjedi was released on parole in 2020.

Another co-accused, Jefferson Snyders, who was convicted of aggravated robbery and was sentenced to ten years and acquitted of the murder, died years later.

Hassen also met with the parole board in 2021.

 ?? ?? NAJWA Dirk has been granted parole.
NAJWA Dirk has been granted parole.

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