Community marches through Nyanga demanding #JusticeForLonwabo

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By Mthuthuzeli Ntseku Time of article published42m ago

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Cape Town – The knife allegedly used to kill 22-year-old Lonwabo Jack, from Nyanga East, last week was found, Nyanga station commander Vuyisile Ncata has revealed.

Ncata was addressing residents who had marched to the police station on the weekend, seeking justice for Jack, who was killed on his birthday. Ncata also said that semen, which was also found on his private parts, was taken to a lab for testing.

“The investigations are almost complete and what is now outstanding is the results from the lab. The knife that was used had blood on it, and we suspect the blood belonged to the deceased,” he said.

The community demanded that the case of Jack be prioritised and escalated to the provincial detectives, bail to be opposed for the accused, and monthly updates on progress of the case be given to the task team that consists of the family, community, and civil society organisations.

#JusticeforLonwabo campaign representative Selina Tyatyeka said the community requested and demanded that something be done about hate crimes, as people on the receiving end do not understand why these murderers were not punished.

“Due to the fact that there has been a rise of hate crimes in Nyanga, leading to murders of members of the LGBTQIA+ community, such as Ntsikie Tyatyeka, Phumeza Nkolonzi and Lonwabo Jack, answers are sought as to practical actions taken by the police departments and stations handling these cases,” she said.

Pharie Sefali, from Triangle Project, said the spike further affirmed that while constitutional protection remained a crucial victory by the community, it has not been enough to safeguard and make meaningful the rights of LGBTQIA+ persons.

“Hate crimes against LGBTQIA+ people are not a single-issue struggle, and as long as there is no response from the State and its actors, despite the urgency of the political moment we are in, all the homo-transphobic violence and deaths are state sponsored violence. We have to act now.

“It is not a coincidence that, in the main, it is poor black people who suffer still today, at the hands of the logic of apartheid spatial planning, in townships and rural areas, who are victims to this senseless violence and loss of life,” she said.

Community Safety MEC Albert Fritz said he will write to the GBV desk at the Court Watching Brief Unit, to ask them to follow the case and other GBV cases.

“When we speak of gender-based violence, we include all of those who suffer violence, and even death, because of societal reactions and perceptions around gender. This, therefore, includes people like Jack, who suffered this gruesome death on his birthday. Nobody deserves that. And I am not going to rest until we see a drastic reduction in gender-based violence,” he said.

Cape Argus

Credit IOL

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