
South African mother sentenced to life in prison for selling her daughter
CAPE TOWN — A South African woman has been sentenced to life in prison for selling her 6-year-old daughter, who remains missing more than a year after her disappearance, in a case that has shocked the nation.
Kelly Smith, along with her boyfriend Jacquen Appollis and a friend, Steveno van Rhyn, were convicted of human trafficking and kidnapping and received life sentences for their roles in the crime. Each was also handed an additional 10-year sentence for kidnapping.
The sentencing was delivered Thursday by Judge Nathan Erasmus at a sports center in the town of Saldanha Bay, northwest of Cape Town, where the trial had been relocated to accommodate local community members.
Joshlin, Smith's daughter, vanished in February 2024. Her smiling photograph became a symbol of a nationwide search effort, initially prompting widespread sympathy for Smith. But the investigation took a dark turn when she and the two men were arrested.
During the trial, a witness testified that Smith had confessed to selling her daughter to a traditional healer for approximately $1,000.
The judge did not rule on the exact nature of the transaction or the buyer's identity but concluded that the child was trafficked for slavery or practices resembling slavery.
Joshlin's whereabouts remain unknown, and the case continues to haunt the Saldanha Bay community. — Agencies
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Saudi Gazette
2 days ago
- Saudi Gazette
South African mother sentenced to life in prison for selling her daughter
CAPE TOWN — A South African woman has been sentenced to life in prison for selling her 6-year-old daughter, who remains missing more than a year after her disappearance, in a case that has shocked the nation. Kelly Smith, along with her boyfriend Jacquen Appollis and a friend, Steveno van Rhyn, were convicted of human trafficking and kidnapping and received life sentences for their roles in the crime. Each was also handed an additional 10-year sentence for kidnapping. The sentencing was delivered Thursday by Judge Nathan Erasmus at a sports center in the town of Saldanha Bay, northwest of Cape Town, where the trial had been relocated to accommodate local community members. Joshlin, Smith's daughter, vanished in February 2024. Her smiling photograph became a symbol of a nationwide search effort, initially prompting widespread sympathy for Smith. But the investigation took a dark turn when she and the two men were arrested. During the trial, a witness testified that Smith had confessed to selling her daughter to a traditional healer for approximately $1,000. The judge did not rule on the exact nature of the transaction or the buyer's identity but concluded that the child was trafficked for slavery or practices resembling slavery. Joshlin's whereabouts remain unknown, and the case continues to haunt the Saldanha Bay community. — Agencies


Saudi Gazette
3 days ago
- Saudi Gazette
Suspect in South African student's murder killed in police shootout
JOHANNESBURG — A suspect wanted for the murder of a South African university student has been killed in a shootout with police. The man had been linked to the death of Olorato Mongale, whose body was found in Johannesburg on Sunday, about two hours after she was reported missing having gone on a date. In the early hours of Friday morning, police officers found the main suspect hiding at a residential complex in the coastal town of Amanzimtoti, police spokesperson Athlenda Mathe said. The suspect, who has not been named by the police, shot at the officers, who returned fire and killed him, Brigadier Mathe added. Regional police commissioner Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi said that at the time of the suspect's death, he had 28 ID cards and a dozen mobile phones in his possession. Ms Mongale's death has sparked a fierce debate about the levels of violence faced by women in South Africa. The country has one of the highest rates of femicide and gender-based violence in the world. In an impassioned statement, Police Minister Senzo Mchunu called Ms Mongale's killing "inhumane" and "gruesome", adding: "To all men, this is a plea - simple, urgent, and human: Please, stop killing women." While continuing the search for two other men allegedly linked to the murder, the police took the parents of the deceased suspect into custody. The suspect's mother is accused of enabling him to "evade arrest" by tipping him off about the police's presence at her house. The police also said the suspect's father is the owner of a VW Polo allegedly used in Ms Mongale's murder. The vehicle, which has been seized by the police, had traces of blood inside it, Brig Mathe said. The suspect's parents were questioned in custody but have now been released, said commissioner Mkhwanazi. Earlier this week, the police named the three suspects linked to the killing as Fezile Ngubane, Philangenkosi Sibongokuhle Makhanya and Bongani Mthimkhulu. Two of them — Makhanya and Mr Mthimkhulu — were last month arrested for kidnapping and robbing a woman in KwaZulu-Natal, using the same VW Polo involved in Ms Mongale's murder, police said. Both men had been freed on bail. As part of their investigation into the killing, the police have identified a criminal gang or "syndicate" who have been targeting women in malls "for kidnapping and robbery", said police spokesperson Mathe. "They propose them, request to take them out on a date. When they agree, that is when they plan to rob them," she added. When Ms Mongale was last seen on Sunday, she was on a date with a man she had met a few days earlier at a shopping center. CCTV footage showed her leaving a location in Kew, Johannesburg, and walking towards a white VW Polo with fake license plates. The 30-year-old's friends said she was invited for a date by a man only identified as John, who she had met in Johannesburg, where she was studying for a postgraduate degree at Witwatersrand University. She texted one of her friends shortly before leaving home, saying that she was excited and getting ready for her date. But police later found her body in an open field, sparking public outrage and calls for justice. Family spokesperson Criselda Kananda said Ms Mongale's body was "brutally violated". A candlelight vigil was held on Wednesday evening in Lombardy West, at the site where her body was found. Family and friends have described her as an outspoken, bubbly woman who "lived with purpose and love", local media reported. — BBC


Saudi Gazette
16-05-2025
- Saudi Gazette
Top Australian soldier loses appeal over war crimes defamation case
SYDNEY — Australia's most-decorated living soldier Ben Roberts-Smith, has lost an appeal against a landmark defamation judgement which found he committed war crimes. A judge in 2023 ruled that news articles alleging the Victoria Cross recipient had murdered four unarmed Afghans were true, but Roberts-Smith had argued the judge made legal errors. The civil trial was the first time in history any court has assessed claims of war crimes by Australian forces. A panel of three Federal Court judges on Friday unanimously upheld the original judgement, though Roberts-Smith has said he will appeal the decision to the High Court of Australia "immediately". "I continue to maintain my innocence and deny these egregious spiteful allegations," he said in a statement. Roberts-Smith, who left the defence force in 2013, has not been charged over any of the claims in a criminal court, where there is a higher burden of former special forces corporal sued three Australian newspapers over a series of articles alleging serious misconduct while he was deployed in Afghanistan between 2009 and 2012 as part of a US-led military the time the articles were published in 2018, Roberts-Smith was considered a national hero, having been awarded Australia's highest military honour for single-handedly overpowering Taliban fighters attacking his Special Air Service (SAS) 46-year-old argued the alleged killings occurred legally during combat or did not happen at all, claiming the papers ruined his life with their defamation case - which some have dubbed "the trial of the century" in Australia - lasted over 120 days and is now rumored to have cost up to A$35m ($22.5m; £16.9m).In June 2023 Federal Court Justice Antony Besanko threw out the case against The Age, The Sydney Morning Herald, and The Canberra Times, ruling it was "substantially true" that Roberts-Smith had murdered unarmed Afghan prisoners and civilians and bullied fellow also found that Roberts-Smith lied to cover up his misconduct and threatened allegations that he had punched his lover, threatened a peer, and committed two other murders were not proven to the "balance of probabilities" standard required in civil "heart" of the appeal case was that Justice Besanko didn't given enough weight to Roberts-Smith's presumption of innocence, his barrister Bret Walker, SC is a legal principle requiring judges to proceed carefully when dealing with civil cases that involve serious allegations and in making findings which carry grave argued that meant the evidence presented by the newspapers fell short of the standard after the appeal case had closed, Roberts-Smith's legal team earlier this year sought to reopen it, alleging misconduct by one of the reporters at the center of the argued there was a miscarriage of justice because Nick McKenzie, one of the journalists who wrote the articles at the center of the case, allegedly unlawfully obtained details about Roberts-Smith's legal legal team pointed to a leaked phone call between McKenzie and a witness — which The Age, The Sydney Morning Herald, and The Canberra Times said may have been recorded on Friday, the trio of judges rejected that argument said "the evidence was sufficiently cogent to support the findings that the appellant murdered four Afghan men"."To the extent that we have discerned error in the reasons of the primary judge, the errors were inconsequential," they also ordered Roberts-Smith to pay the newspapers' legal a statement, McKenzie called the ruling an "emphatic win".He thanked the SAS soldiers who "fought for the Australian public to learn the truth", and paid tribute to the Afghan "victims of [Mr] Roberts-Smith"."It should not be left to journalists and brave soldiers to stand up to a war criminal," he said. "Australian authorities must hold Ben Roberts-Smith accountable before our criminal justice system." — BBC