Embattled Nigerian pastor
failed in his appeal at the Supreme Court of Appeal against a Port Elizabeth
judge’s decision to allow the trial to be heard in the court.
The trial of Nigerian
pastor, Timothy Omotoso in South Africa for sexual assault suffered fresh
hiccup today as his defence attorney said Omotoso would approach the highest
court in the country, in a fresh appeal.
On Monday, state prosecutor
Nceba Ntelwa told Judge Irma Schoeman that the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA)
had dismissed Omotoso’s application to appeal her decision to have the trial
heard in Port Elizabeth. Ntelwa said the state was ready to begin the case.
But Omotoso’s lawyer Peter
Daubermann said that in the interest of justice, his clients’ instructions were
to bring an application to appeal the SCA’s judgment to the Constitutional
Court.
“My instructions are to
apply for a postponement to allow my clients to exercise these rights,”
Daubermann said.
He told the court on Monday
that he anticipated he needed at least two weeks to prepare the application for
the appeal to the Constitutional Court.
Schoeman postponed the
matter till November 21.
Omotoso and his two
accomplices, Lusanda Sulani, 36, and Zukiswa Sitho, 28 are facing multiple
counts ranging from human trafficking to rape and sexual assault.
They are yet to take a
plea. Omotoso has been remanded in prison.
It was the second time
Omotoso, 60, and his co-accused, had lost a petition to the Supreme Court of
Appeal.
It was also the umpteenth
time the case will suffer some adjournment.
In its judgment, the SCA
ruled that the application for leave to appeal Schoeman’s decision was
dismissed on the grounds that there were no reasonable prospects of success,
and that there was no other compelling reason why an appeal should be heard.
In August, defence attorney
for Omotoso and his co-accused, Peter Daubermann, argued that the Port
Elizabeth high court did not have the authority to hear the entire matter as
some of the alleged offences took place elsewhere in the country and abroad.
Daubermann claimed the
authorisation certificate to centralise the case was invalid as some of the
alleged offences took place outside the court’s jurisdiction..
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