Cape Times

‘Not guilty’: businessma­n free after life sentence quashed

- ZELDA VENTER zelda.venter@inl.co.za

AFTER spending about a year and a half of his life sentence behind bars, the name of a Pretoria businessma­n who shot dead two members of the so-called Concerned Tshwane Residents group, has been cleared.

The Gauteng High Court, Pretoria, on appeal found that Muhamed Sajid Khan acted in self defence when he fired two shots, killing Mamelodi businessma­n and activist Kabelo Matlala and bystander Avela Mbewu on February 1, 2020.

The court, in overturnin­g his conviction and sentence, ordered Khan's immediate release.

On the day of the incident, members of the organisati­on went to one of Khan's properties in Luttig Street, Pretoria West, to verify whether he was the registered owner of the property.

Khan said he had fired shots that day in self-defence but in June 2022, Judge Papi Mosopa found that the shooting was premeditat­ed.

The judge said Khan had received a call earlier that day that there was a group gathered at his Pretoria West property, and had his firearm ready and at his side when he stopped at the premises in his black Lexus.

Khan's version of the events was that on the day of the incident, he received an anonymous phone call that he had to go to his Luttig Street property.

He said when he got there, he saw a group of people, including the two deceased, there. He said he knew they were members of the organisati­on whose aim was to “rid Pretoria from foreign ownership of property by unfair means”.

According to him, he was part of an applicatio­n launched in court in 2019 to obtain an interdict against the group, which was hijacking foreign-owned property, including some belonging to him.

Khan, a Pakistani national, is a naturalise­d South African citizen living in the country for many years.

He said that on the day of the incident, the group demanded the title deeds to his property. According to him, they were aggressive and he had noted that some had firearms, which were covered by their trousers and shirts.

He said after stopping at his property, he tried to close the gate but could not as he was pushed by the crowd and stumbled backwards.

Khan explained that, as he feared for his life, he fired several shots. According to him, he did not act unlawfully and only tried to defend his life.

On appeal before three judges, he argued that the trial court erred in rejecting his defence of private defence. The court also misdirecte­d itself by finding that his conduct was premeditat­ed, he said.

The court on appeal found that the undisputed bullet trajectory finding showed that the person who was shooting at the deceased had done so without aiming, and was not stable on his feet.

 ?? ?? MUHAMED Sajid Khan during sentencing in 2022
MUHAMED Sajid Khan during sentencing in 2022

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