News / National
Zimbabwean man jailed 8 years in SA
15 Jan 2024 at 23:38hrs | Views
A 36-year-old Zimbabwean man has been jailed for an effective eight years by a Mokopane Regional Court in South Africa after he was found driving a stolen car that was heading to the Limpopo River.
Cosmos Ndou was arrested by Limpopo police as they intensified a crackdown on syndicates stealing cars in that country, which they then smuggle into Zimbabwe enroute to Malawi, Mozambique, Tanzania and Zambia.,
However, some of the vehicles find their way into the Zimbabwean market.
Limpopo police spokesperson Colonel Malasela Ledwaba said Ndou was condemned to prison on Friday afternoon.
"The conviction and subsequent sentencing comes after, the court heard that on 18 September 2023, the accused was found in possession of a stolen motor vehicle, a bronze Toyota Fortuner that was reported stolen at Brooklyn policing area, in Gauteng Province on the 16th of September 2023," he said.
"On 18 September 2023, the police arrested the suspect, after the security company at Mookgopong was alerted by a vehicle tracking company to be on the lookout for the stolen vehicle that was coming in their direction, along R101 North.
"The security stopped the vehicle and found the driver, then explained to him that the vehicle was reported stolen. The police were quickly activated, and they immediately apprehended the suspect".
Col Ledwaba said Ndou was found guilty on the charges of possession of a stolen motor vehicle (first charge) and contravening a section of the immigration act (second Charge).
Subsequently, he was slapped with six years imprisonment for possession of the stolen car and another two years in jail for violating immigration laws.
The smuggling of vehicles has become rampant around the border line and the government is losing millions of dollars in import revenue annually.
A modest car is charged 96 percent import duty inclusive of VAT and Surtax on the total invoice value.
Indications are that most of these cars are stolen from rental cars in South Africa while thefts are orchestrated by insurance fraud syndicates in that country.
In insurance fraud, the vehicles are clandestinely sold and smuggled out of South Africa, after which their owners working with syndicates then report them stolen and claim insurance money.
Cosmos Ndou was arrested by Limpopo police as they intensified a crackdown on syndicates stealing cars in that country, which they then smuggle into Zimbabwe enroute to Malawi, Mozambique, Tanzania and Zambia.,
However, some of the vehicles find their way into the Zimbabwean market.
Limpopo police spokesperson Colonel Malasela Ledwaba said Ndou was condemned to prison on Friday afternoon.
"The conviction and subsequent sentencing comes after, the court heard that on 18 September 2023, the accused was found in possession of a stolen motor vehicle, a bronze Toyota Fortuner that was reported stolen at Brooklyn policing area, in Gauteng Province on the 16th of September 2023," he said.
"On 18 September 2023, the police arrested the suspect, after the security company at Mookgopong was alerted by a vehicle tracking company to be on the lookout for the stolen vehicle that was coming in their direction, along R101 North.
"The security stopped the vehicle and found the driver, then explained to him that the vehicle was reported stolen. The police were quickly activated, and they immediately apprehended the suspect".
Col Ledwaba said Ndou was found guilty on the charges of possession of a stolen motor vehicle (first charge) and contravening a section of the immigration act (second Charge).
Subsequently, he was slapped with six years imprisonment for possession of the stolen car and another two years in jail for violating immigration laws.
The smuggling of vehicles has become rampant around the border line and the government is losing millions of dollars in import revenue annually.
A modest car is charged 96 percent import duty inclusive of VAT and Surtax on the total invoice value.
Indications are that most of these cars are stolen from rental cars in South Africa while thefts are orchestrated by insurance fraud syndicates in that country.
In insurance fraud, the vehicles are clandestinely sold and smuggled out of South Africa, after which their owners working with syndicates then report them stolen and claim insurance money.
Source - the herald