The terrorism case against a man who allegedly orchestrated a series of bomb scares in the City of Cape Town has been moved from the Belville Magistrates Court to the Bellville Regional Court.
Ferdinand Fortuin allegedly made false bomb threats at the
Bellville taxi rank, transit park building, and department of water and
sanitation offices last November.
‘’Fortuin is charged with four counts of contravention of
the Protection of Constitutional Democracy Against Terrorism and Related
Activities Act 33 of 2004 (POCDATARA) and for contravention of the Explosives
Act 26 of 1956. The Deputy Director of Public Prosecution in the Western Cape,
Adv Mervyn Menigo, told the court the case was previously postponed for the
National Director of Public Prosecutions to authorise Fortuin’s prosecution on the
POCDATARA charges. Today the authorization was provided to the court and
attached to the charge sheet before the matter was transferred,’’ said Eric
Ntabazalila, National Prosecuting Authority Western Cape spokesperson.
The State alleges that the 49-year-old Mamre resident
contacted the Bellville Police Station on 11 November 2024 and informed
officers that he had placed explosive devices at the Bellville Department of
Water and Sanitation offices in Voortrekker Road and Bellville South, the
Transnet Park Building and the Bellville Taxi Rank. Ntabazalila said this resulted
in the deployment of substantial state resources and the evacuation of
thousands of people from the three sites.
‘’At the Water and Sanitation Department offices in
Voortrekker Road, Bellville, police assisted by the three bomb disposal
technicians, K-9 Dog Unit using explosive detection canines and visible
policing unit members evacuated 164 people while 151 people were evacuated at
the department’s Bellville South offices. Police assisted by the same units
evacuated 250 people from the Transnet Park Building offices and 3 000 people
were evacuated from the taxi rank. The taxi rank was closed and roads leading
to and out of the taxi rank were closed resulting in huge panic in the area.
Although the threats proved to be a hoax, the NPA views the charges in a
serious light as they resulted in panic amongst the public and economic
disruption at the three sites. The Legislature has criminalised this type of
conduct in POCDATARA and in the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997 has
prescribed a minimum sentence of 15 years imprisonment for a first offender.
The NPA will not hesitate to prosecute conduct of this nature to the full
extent that the law allows.’’
The case has been postponed to 24 April 2025.
Done By: Mitchum George
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