Why when asked by police for the taxi drivers number did Shreni say he had to ring home for it....Or did he have to ring the daughter in law who also lives in Bristol ?
http://watchingyouwatchingyme-steelmagnolia.blogspot.com/2010/12/dewanismart-like-he-was-coming-out-of.html
http://www.ttglive.com/c/portal/layout?p_l_id=3208370&CMPI_SHARED_articleId=3802227&CMPI_SHARED_ImageArticleId=3802227&CMPI_SHARED_articleIdRelated=3802227&CMPI_SHARED_ToolsArticleId=3802227&CMPI_SHARED_CommentArticleId=3802227&articleTitle=Day%20in%20the%20life:%20Agent%20Alvita%20on%20Warner%5C
Dewani, to get a discount claims he works for a travel agency...ALVITA just happens to work for a travel agency, did she arrange the trip and the taxi????
.....something odd here , and possibly does the daughter in law know the taxi driver?...Heather Raghavjee leaves the country and rushes to Bristol to be with her family after the killing. Much more to come from this story yet. The daughter in law of Heather does not inform her mother in law the Dewanis are in South Africa on honeymonn....ONLY after the murder does she phone...The fourth suspect ALSO from East London....possibly the hit was arranged BEFORE they left for SA. I think ALVITA should be brought in by police for a little chat...she maybe holds the key.
Quote
When the police arrived, they asked Mr Dewani for the registration number of the taxi and he said he could get it by ringing his family in London.
The police source said: ‘He tried to phone his family from the officer’s phone but he could only make local calls.
‘So Mr Dewani said we must take him straight to the hotel. It seems as if maybe the family hired the car for Mr Dewani. Unquote
-----------
The widow of a man murdered in South Africa whose case has been linked to honeymoon killing suspect Shrien Dewani has said that allegations against him had no substance.
Heather Raghavjee, whose husband Dr Pox Raghavjee was killed in a carjacking three years ago, said her heart went out to “the young lad”.
British newlywed Mr Dewani is accused of hiring a hitman to kill his bride Anni on their South African honeymoon and has also been linked to the murder of Dr Raghavjee. South African national commissioner general Bheki Cele has said police are investigating a link between the wealthy businessman and the murder.
Dr Raghavjee died in King William’s Town, Eastern Cape, but the case reportedly remains open.
Publicist Max Clifford, who represents Dewani, has dismissed the possibility his client was implicated in either murder and issued a statement from Mrs Raghavjee, which said: “I am very upset myself, and particularly for Shrien and his family, for the awful accusations that have emerged from South Africa, concerning the murder of my husband three years ago.
Shrien Dewani is suffering from the tragic murder of his wife, which is made even more painful for him by horrible totally false accusations that have come out of South Africa. There is absolutely no substance in these allegations, and my heart goes out to the young lad.”
But he said they had never previously met and Mrs Raghavjee had made the journey at the request of her daughter-in-law Alvita Raghavjee, who lives in the Bristol area and knows the Dewani family.
“Heather Raghavjee flew from King William’s Town in South Africa to Cape Town to try to comfort the family at the request of her daughter-in-law Alvita, who lives in the Bristol area and knew the Dewani family,” Mr Clifford has said. “She had never met Shrien before in her life. But she experienced what he experienced when her husband, Dr Pox Raghavjee, was shot dead in a carjacking three years earlier.”
The PR guru added: “How flimsy and ridiculous this whole thing is. If it wasn’t so tragic it would be a farce, a comedy.”
Dewani, 30, was released from Wandsworth Prison on bail on Friday after his family came up with £250,000 security. He is wanted by South African police for conspiracy to murder Anni, 28, who was killed after their taxi was seized by gunmen.
Taxi driver Zola Tongo accused Dewani of offering to pay 15,000 rand (£1,400) for his wife’s murder and ordering it to appear like a bungled carjacking as they drove through the notorious township of Gugulethu. Tongo’s allegation formed part of a plea agreement drawn up with prosecutors at Western Cape High Court where he was jailed for 18 years last week for his part in the killing.
Win a Football get-together plus 50 inch Plasma TV with Mirror FootballCheap sports tickets are now available to the top sporting events in the UK and abroad. Find VfL Wolfsburg v Bayern Munchen, Barclays ATP World Tour Final, NBA Europe, The Ashes and UFC 120 at Mirror Tickets.
This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service — if this is your content and you’re reading it on someone else’s site, please read our FAQ page at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.phpHeather Raghavjee, whose husband Dr Pox Raghavjee was killed in a carjacking three years ago, said her heart went out to “the young lad”.
British newlywed Mr Dewani is accused of hiring a hitman to kill his bride Anni on their South African honeymoon and has also been linked to the murder of Dr Raghavjee. South African national commissioner general Bheki Cele has said police are investigating a link between the wealthy businessman and the murder.
Dr Raghavjee died in King William’s Town, Eastern Cape, but the case reportedly remains open.
Publicist Max Clifford, who represents Dewani, has dismissed the possibility his client was implicated in either murder and issued a statement from Mrs Raghavjee, which said: “I am very upset myself, and particularly for Shrien and his family, for the awful accusations that have emerged from South Africa, concerning the murder of my husband three years ago.
Shrien Dewani is suffering from the tragic murder of his wife, which is made even more painful for him by horrible totally false accusations that have come out of South Africa. There is absolutely no substance in these allegations, and my heart goes out to the young lad.”
Advertisement – article continues below »
Mr Clifford has said Dewani, from Westbury-on-Trym, Bristol, met Mrs Raghavjee in South Africa after the murder.But he said they had never previously met and Mrs Raghavjee had made the journey at the request of her daughter-in-law Alvita Raghavjee, who lives in the Bristol area and knows the Dewani family.
“Heather Raghavjee flew from King William’s Town in South Africa to Cape Town to try to comfort the family at the request of her daughter-in-law Alvita, who lives in the Bristol area and knew the Dewani family,” Mr Clifford has said. “She had never met Shrien before in her life. But she experienced what he experienced when her husband, Dr Pox Raghavjee, was shot dead in a carjacking three years earlier.”
The PR guru added: “How flimsy and ridiculous this whole thing is. If it wasn’t so tragic it would be a farce, a comedy.”
Dewani, 30, was released from Wandsworth Prison on bail on Friday after his family came up with £250,000 security. He is wanted by South African police for conspiracy to murder Anni, 28, who was killed after their taxi was seized by gunmen.
Taxi driver Zola Tongo accused Dewani of offering to pay 15,000 rand (£1,400) for his wife’s murder and ordering it to appear like a bungled carjacking as they drove through the notorious township of Gugulethu. Tongo’s allegation formed part of a plea agreement drawn up with prosecutors at Western Cape High Court where he was jailed for 18 years last week for his part in the killing.
Win a Football get-together plus 50 inch Plasma TV with Mirror Football
Five Filters featured site: So, Why is Wikileaks a Good Thing Again?.