Bail bid for Limpopo farmer, his two workers accused of murdering two women, feeding them to pigs

Limpopo farmer Zachariah Johannes Olivier, farm supervisor Andrian Rudolph De Wet and employee William Musora face charges of murder. Picture: NPA

Limpopo farmer Zachariah Johannes Olivier, farm supervisor Andrian Rudolph De Wet and employee William Musora face charges of murder. Picture: NPA

Published Sep 10, 2024

Share

Limpopo pig farmer, Zachariah Johannes Olivier, farm supervisor Andrian Rudolph De Wet, and farm employee William Musora are on Tuesday set to appear before the Mankweng Magistrate’s Court, seeking bail, after they were arrested for the murder of two Limpopo women.

IOL has previously reported that 60-year-old farmer Olivier, farm supervisor De Wet, 19, and farm employee Musora, 45, a Zimbabwean national, appeared in court facing two counts of premeditated murder, attempted murder and possession of an unlicensed firearm and ammunition after they allegedly killed two women and dumped their bodies in a pigsty.

It is alleged that the three men fatally shot 47-year-old Mariah Makgato and 34-year-old Kudzai Ndlovu and wounded Ndlovu's husband Mabutho who had entered Onvervaght farm to collect expired goods dumped by a commercial truck. The two women died on the farm while Mabutho, managed to escape.

The man who survived the deadly Limpopo shooting has recounted the harrowing experience when he escaped for dear life, leaving his wife and Makgato on the scene.

Limpopo farmer Zachariah Johannes Olivier, farm supervisor Andrian Rudolph De Wet and employee William Musora face charges of murder. Picture: NPA

“The first shot was fired into the air. The second bullet hit me, third bullet hit the other woman who was with us (Makgato) and the fourth bullet hit my wife. I went down, and after a while, I went to check on my wife to see if she was alive,” said Mabutho after being discharged from hospital.

He said he tried to lift and assist his wife, Kudzai, but he could not do much as he had been shot as well.

The injured man struggled to get to the main road to seek assistance and he was later assisted by an associate, who took him to the police station.

At the police station, an ambulance was called and Mabutho was taken to hospital. He said while travelling to hospital, he noticed that his intestines were flowing from his stomach.

“When I was in the ambulance going to the hospital, they took off the T-shirt I was wearing. I had blood flowing out of my stomach and when I checked, it was flesh flowing from my abdomen. At hospital, they said they were taking me to theatre,” he said.

While in hospital, he heard that police and emergency services had visited the farm but they did not find the women who were shot.

Mabutho Ndlovu, 44, survived the shooting at a pig farm in Limpopo, where his wife Kudzai and another woman Mariah Makgato lost their lives. Picture: Newzroom Afrika/Screengrab

“After four to five days, while I was still in hospital, I then heard that the two women’s bodies had been found in the pigsty. I did not expect that to happen. All this time, I thought my wife was in the women’s ward in the hospital. That hurt me so much,” said Mabutho.

The third accused man in the case, Musora faces a further charge of contravening the Immigration Act.

During the previous bail application hearing, Olivier's legal team requested access to his warning statement, while De Wet sought access to the contents of the case docket.

"The State opposed these applications, asserting that the accused were not entitled to the information for bail purposes. Consequently, the State noted an appeal against the ruling made by Magistrate Arshad Chaya regarding Olivier's application for access,” said National Prosecuting Authority’s Limpopo regional spokesperson, Mashudu Malabi-Dzhangi.

IOL