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[2004] ZAWCHC 48
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S v Orrie (SS32/2003) [2004] ZAWCHC 48 (18 October 2004)
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(CAPE
OF GOOD HOPE PROVINCIAL DIVISION)
CASE
NO
: SS32/2003
DATE
: 18-10-2004
In
the matter of:
THE
STATE
versus
1.
MOGAMAT
PHADIEL ORRIE
SENTENCE
BOZALEK,
J
:
This
Court must now impose sentence on you Mr Orrie. In doing so I must
consider your personal circumstances, the crimes themselves
and the
interests of society.
As
far as your personal circumstances are concerned;, I take into
account that you are a 29 year old married man with two young
children. I also take into account that you have a clean record as
far as previous convictions are concerned and that prior to
your
incarceration you had a record of stable employment and you supported
your family. I also take into account that you have
been incarcerated
for the very lengthy period of three and a half years awaiting trial
on these charges.
As
far as the legal framework is concerned, the State does not rely on
the minimum sentencing dispensation as embodied in the Criminal
Law
Amendment Act 75 of 1 997. It is a moot point as to whether those
provisions
apply inasmuch as the State did not apprise you in the charge sheet
that it relied on them. I propose to approach the
matter of sentence
on the basis that those provisions do not apply since, in my view, in
the circumstances of this matter, whether
or not I am bound by those
provisions, is largely academic. Accordingly, I have approached the
question on what an appropriate
sentence is for you on the basis that
I have an unfettered discretion.
Turning
to the crimes themselves, you have been convicted of housebreaking
with the intent to murder and the murder of Yusuf Enous
and, on count
2, of murdering Fahiema Enous. In addition, you have been convicted
of two contraventions of Act 75 of 1 965, the
Arms and Ammunition
Act. All these convictions comprise in essence one course of conduct,
namely breaking into the house of Fahiema
and Yusuf Enous and killing
them by repeatedly shooting them.
You
have been convicted on two counts of the most serious crime with
which a person can be charged in our legal system, namely the
deliberate and unlawful taking of someone else's life. There is only
limited evidence before this Court as to your motivation in
killing
Yusuf and Fahiema Enous since you continue to deny - as is your right
- that you committed the crimes. It follows from
that of course that
there can be no question of any expression of remorse on your part.
Because of your denial of these murders
and your failure to take the
Court into your confidence, it is not clear to me whether your motive
was simply to assist your brother,
his fellow accused, or perhaps
whether you had some wider or underlying political or social agenda
behind your actions. No point
is served by my speculating any further
in this regard.
From
the evidence before this Court, however, it would appear that you did
so in order to prevent, at the very least; Yusuf Enous
from giving
evidence as a State witness in an urban terror case in which your
brother and other accused were involved. What is
clear is that the
crimes which you committed were carefully planned and cold-bloodedly
carried out. The crimes themselves must
fill every right-thinking
member of society with outrage. You broke into a house in the small
hours of the morning and shot dead
a young and defenceless couple in
the presence, moreover, of their infant child. The murders themselves
can best be described as
executions. Both of the victims were shot
numerous times with several fatal bullet wounds to the head. Clearly
your intent was
that under no circumstances could either victim be
left to ever speak again.
In
regard to Fahiema Enous it is unclear whether she was to be a State
witness, but whatever the case, for your purposes, she could
not be
left to live since this would lead to your identification as her
husband's killer. The Enouses died a terrible death, alone
and
defenceless and trapped in a house far away from family, friends and
protection. They fled from you into their bedroom and
it appears Mrs
Enous died trying to protect her young child. The terror which the
Enouses must have suffered in the last few seconds
and minutes of
their lives is awful to consider.
Through
your actions you [eft two young children orphaned, never to know
their parents again.
But
not only did you take the lives of the Enouses, at the same time you
also struck a grievous blow against the administration
of justice.
There can be no successful prosecution of criminal cases without the
evidence of State witnesses. Where such witnesses
are threatened or
harmed in any way not only do such persons suffer but damage is done
to the criminal justice system as a whole.
Where witnesses are
murdered, notwithstanding the fact that they are under a witness
protection program, the intended or unintended
effect thereof is to
strike fear into the hearts of other persons in a similar position
thereby discouraging or inhibiting them
from testifying, with the
result that criminal conduct can go unprosecuted or unpunished.
There
is no doubt-then that the fact that your underlying motive must have
been to prevent one or both Enouses from testifying is
a highly
aggravating feature of these crimes. The system of criminal justice,
which includes the role played therein by State witnesses,
exists for
the protection of society. It follows that where, in killing State
witnesses, you attack that system wrth impunity,
society demands that
the response to such criminal conduct be a strong one, one which
emphasises that such actions will not be
tolerated and will be
severely punished.
It
is also sobering to consider how close you came to escaping detection
and prosecution for the crimes which you committed. Were
it not for
three tiny blood specks and the alertness of a policeman in Gouda on
the night of the murders, these crimes might well
have gone unsolved.
Whilst there are clearly many members of the South African Police
Service who played a role in the investigation
of this matter, the
Court would particularly like to commend Mr Andries le Fleur, the
police reservist who noticed your brother's
vehicle in Gouda on the
night of 25 December 2000. It was this observation that put the
police on your trail. I note that this
witness himself had to go into
a witness protection program. His diligence in performing his duties
and the sacrifices which he
had to undergo as a result of being drawn
into this matter are to be commended.
Mr
Orrie, I am afraid that your personal circumstances, mitigating as
they are, are far outweighed by the existence of the aggravating
factors which I have mentioned. When all factors, both positive and
negative, are taken into account, there can, in my view, be
only one
appropriate sentence for your convictions on counts 1 and 2, namely
for breaking into the Enouses house and killing them.
Nor can any
distinction be drawn between count 1 and count 2 for the purposes of
sentence.
For
the sake of completeness I would merely add that had I been applying
the provisions of the minimum sentence legislation I would
not have
been able to find that there were any substantial and compelling
circumstances such as to justify a lesser sentence than
the minimum
sentence prescribed.
As
far as the convictions on counts 5 and 6 are concerned, I propose to
take these together for the purposes of sentence. Will the
accused
please rise.
Counts
5 and 6 are taken together for the purposes of sentence and you are
sentenced to two years' imprisonment.
In
terms of the provisions of section 12 of Act 75 of 1969 you are
declared unfit to possess a firearm.
In
respect of count 1, your conviction of housebreaking with the intent
to murder and the murder of Yusuf Enous, you are sentenced
to life
imprisonment in terms of section 276(1 ){b) of the Criminal Procedure
Act.
In
respect of count 2, the murder of Fahiema Enous, you are likewise
sentenced to life imprisonment.
BOZALEK,
J