
Mother sold daughter to witch doctor for £850
A South African mother accused of selling her missing six-year-old daughter to a traditional healer for £850 has been jailed for life.
Kelly Smith, her boyfriend and another accomplice were each given life sentences for the kidnapping and human trafficking of Joshlin Smith who went missing in February 2024.
In a trial that shocked the country, a witness said Smith told her she had sold her daughter for just £850 to a traditional healer and that the girl was desired for her 'eyes and skin'.
Joshlin remains missing nearly 16 months after her disappearance and the judge's verdict made no conclusions on who she had been sold to, or the details of what happened to her.
Dr Marcel van der Watt, an expert on human trafficking based in the US, said during a sentence hearing that whatever had happened to Joshlin, it was highly likely she had been abused after she had been trafficked.
The judge's verdict did not conclude exactly what happened to Joshlin, but said she had been sold for slavery or practices similar to slavery, raising fears she may have been sold for forced labour, domestic servitude, or sexual abuse. There are also fears she may have been murdered.
Judge Nathan Erasmus, sentencing, said: 'There is nothing I can find that is redeeming and deserving of a lesser sentence than the harshest I can impose.'
Smith, her boyfriend Jacquen Appollis and Steveno van Rhyn, a friend of the couple, were each given life sentences for human trafficking and 10 years each for kidnapping.
The community at first rallied around Smith, whose full name is Racquel Chantel Smith, when her daughter went missing outside Saldanha Bay, around 75 miles north of Cape Town.
Photos showing Joshlin's green eyes, broad smile and brown pigtails flooded the internet.
Smith said she had left Joshlin with Appollis on the day she disappeared but she herself was arrested.
Her trial then heard a series of claims including from a local pastor who said that as far back as 2023, he had heard Smith talk of selling her children for 20,000 rand (£850) each.
Lourentia Lombaard, a witness who was a friend and neighbour of Smith, alleged Smith had told her she had sold Joshlin to a traditional healer, known in South Africa as a sangoma.
Ms Lombaard told the court – which was convened in a sports centre in Saldanha Bay – Smith had confessed: 'I did something silly ... I sold my child to a sangoma', adding that she had been driven by a desperate need for money.
Joshlin's mother promised those who were aware of the plan some money in return for their silence, she said.
Joshlin's teacher told the court that Smith had said during the search that her daughter was already 'on a ship, inside a container, and they were on the way to West Africa '.
Smith and her accomplices refused to testify or call any witnesses for their defence during the trial. The public gallery erupted in applause and cheers as the sentences were read out.
Police afterwards said they would continue searching for Joshlin.
Lt Gen Thembisile Patekile, Western Cape provincial police commissioner, said: 'Our thoughts remain with the family of Joshlin Smith. May they find some comfort in knowing that justice has prevailed.
'South African police service remains fully committed to exploring every possible lead in the pursuit of real closure in this tragic matter.'
Dr van der Watt said: 'This was not a spontaneous act but a calculated crime.
'The evidence paints a clear picture of deliberate exploitation and co-ordinated effort by the accused, and a breach of societal and legal obligations to safeguard the most vulnerable among us.
'The victim in this case, six-year-old Joshlin, very likely and plausibly suffered abuse.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
24 minutes ago
- BBC News
Ondo state govment tok why dem demolish Owo massacre memorial park wey late ex-Govnor Akeredolu build
Report say dem don demolish di memorial park wey Ondo state govment bin build in honour of victims of di Owo attacks wey happun for June 2022. Di Memorial Park na in honour of di victims of 5th June, 2022 massacre for St. Francis Xavier Catholic Church for Owo, Ondo State. Pipo of Owo no go forget Sunday June 5, 2022 anytime soon as e mark one bad day wen some unidentified gunmen enta di town and attack di catholic church wia pipo die from gunshots. Na dose wey die during di attacks make di state govment build a memorial park in honour of dem. Dem build di memorial park opposite di palace of di traditional ruler of di town, Olowo of Owo. According to di former Ondo state Govnor, Oluwarotimi Akeredolu, di reason for di memorial park na to immortalise di victims attacks. Di recent demolition don cause serious reactions from di pipo of Ondo state wey dey question why dem pull down di building. Why dem demolish di memorial park According to video wey dey go viral for social media, one caterpillar bin estroy di memorial park. Howeva, Yomi Oyekan wey be di special assistant to di Ondo State govnor on Digital Media, say di reason why dem pull down di building no be for political reason but for sake of spiritual. E say di Olowo-in-council bin request say dem wan demolish di building becos symbol of death no suppose dey face di palace of di king. In Yoruba tradition, symbols of death must not face di palace. "Di Olowo-in-Council make a formal request through di LG, and Govnor Aiyedatiwa to respectfully approve am." "We honour di sincere efforts of di late Gov. Akeredolu, wey build di monument wit love, but tradition matters. Also, informate from di Olowo-in-council na say, di traditions of di town no allow make dem celebrate deadi body around di palace. According to di council, dem advice di late Govnor Akeredolu dat time make e no build any di structure for di place but e no gree. "E must dey clear say di decision to build di structure for di particular location no go well wit di Olowo-in-Council wey di pipo of di community bin frown at wen di late di late Govnor Akeredolu conceive am." Dem add say dem advice di "late govnor say to celebrate di dead around di palace no dey in line wit di age-long culture and traditions of Owo, but di govnor no listen." Akeredolu side react Meanwhile, according to di former chief press secretary to di late Akeredolu, Richard Olabode, e say di intentions na only to honour di memories of di victims wen dem build di park. E say dem no bury any deadi bodi for di memorial park, but na just to dey remember di pipo wey lose dia lives for di attack. "No bodies or corpses dey buried for di memorial park, di park na to celebrate di lives and memories of di departed souls." Olabode say di late Govnor Akeredolu bin call a meeting wit di Olowo of Owo and im chiefs, wia e tok di vision for di park, and add say dem no go bury any deadi bodi for dia. "Di Olowo and im chiefs agree to di site. I dey present for di meeting. Di late Govnor Akeredolu respond to di tragedy of June 5, 2022, wit courage and e do wetin any responsible and responsive leader go do anywhere for di world."


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE Bombshell move from behind bars by Corbie Walpole who set her male friend on FIRE after he made a 'misogynistic' remark
A woman jailed for four and a half years for setting her childhood friend on fire after he made what she deemed misogynistic comments is now appealing against the length of her sentence. Corbie Walpole had originally hoped to receive some form of non-custodial punishment for her senseless crime but was put away for a maximum of seven years and six months. The 24-year-old electrician pleaded guilty in the NSW District Court to one count of burn, maim, disfigure or disable a person by use of a corrosive fluid and learnt her fate on May 22. Judge Jennifer English rejected any suggestion Walpole had been provoked when she attacked 22-year-old Jake Loader in an act of 'destructive and horrifically painful violence'. 'It is never easy to send a young person, particularly a young woman, to jail,' Judge English said, sitting in Albury on the NSW-Victoria border. 'But where appropriate, it is something that must be done.' It can now be revealed Walpole filed a notice of intention to appeal with the Court of Criminal Appeal on June 13, challenging the severity of her sentence. Daily Mail Australia captured some of Walpole's final moments of freedom - photographing the smiling tradie catching up with loved ones over coffee as she frolicked in a park the day before she was locked up. Walpole had faced a maximum sentence of 25 years for setting Mr Loader ablaze as he sat on a chair in her backyard at Howlong, about 30km west of Albury, early last year. The pair met when Mr Loader went to boarding school at St Paul's College at Walla Walla, about 40km north of Albury, and had been friends for at least nine years. Mr Loader, who worked mustering cattle in Queensland, was in Howlong for a short break and joined old friends, including Walpole, for a night out which included celebrating a 21st birthday. Walpole claimed Mr Loader had been baiting her before she poured 5 litres of petrol over his head and used a cigarette lighter to turn him into a human torch. 'He was antagonising me,' she told the court. 'He told me to go to the kitchen where I belong because I'm a girl. I gave it back to him and called him a misogynist.' Judge English rejected any suggestion Walpole - who claimed she had felt 'challenged and disrespected in her own home' - had been goaded into doing what she did. 'I find that the assault upon the victim was unprovoked,' the judge said. Walpole wiped tears from her eyes as Judge English recounted the night that forever changed Mr Loader's life. Mr Loader was 22 and Walpole was 23 when they began drinking with mates about 8pm on January 6, 2024, at Howlong Golf Resort. Two hours later they went to a 21st birthday party at Howlong, then kicked on to a house party at North Albury, and returned to the birthday gathering about 2am. The group's final stop was Walpole's home, where they settled into the backyard about 4am. Some of the revellers, including Walpole, had taken cocaine earlier in the evening and most had retired to the Russell Street house, where Walpole's partner was sleeping, within an hour. Judge English said Walpole had begun drinking at 5pm, downing bottles of cider, schooners of Canadian Club and Bacardi and cola, and cans of Hard Solo. An expert estimated Walpole had consumed 23 to 35 standard drinks over 12 hours and would have had a blood alcohol level between 0.22 and 0.38. In all that time she had eaten only two slices of pizza. Walpole claimed Mr Loader had been antagonising her throughout the evening, trying to wrestle her and wake her sleeping boyfriend. 'He was really pushing my buttons,' she said. 'I was feeling overwhelmed by [Mr Loader's] presence, and I didn't know what to do.' Walpole snapped when Mr Loader said she should be in the kitchen baking scones, rather than out drinking with boys. Walpole had a can of Hard Solo in her hand when she erupted. Walpole got up from an outdoor table and went to her garage where she collected a 5 litre jerry can of fuel, went back to the table, poured the petrol over the seated Mr Loader and waved a cigarette lighter around. 'I'll do it,' Walpole said. 'I'll do it.' Mr Loader replied: 'Go on, do it.' Walpole carried out the threat and Mr Loader was immediately engulfed in flames. Mr Loader, who ran around the yard screaming, tried to pull off his shirt but the melted fabric stuck to his skin. Two male friends extinguished the fire by plunging Mr Loader into a small pool. Walpole held her head in her hands and said: 'What the f*** have I done? He was telling me to do it.' Mr Loader was taken by ambulance to Albury Hospital then flown to The Alfred in Melbourne where he spent eight days in a coma, 74 days in the burns unit, and underwent 10 operations. He had suffered third degree burns to 55 per cent of his body and less severe injuries to an additional six per cent. Those injuries were spread across his back, chest, arms, legs and face. Judge English described Walpole's deeds as 'deliberate acts committed in the presence of others'. 'For those present it must have been truly horrific to be witness to,' she said. 'It was an act of immediate, destructive and horrifically painful violence.' Mr Loader can no longer expose his skin to the sun and his body struggles to regulate its temperature because his sweat glands were burnt off. 'It will affect the rest of my life,' Mr Loader said in a statement read by Crown prosecutor Max Pincott. At a pre-sentence hearing, Walpole wept on in the witness box as she unsuccessfully attempted to explain what she had done. 'I wasn't thinking,' she repeatedly said when asked about her actions. 'I didn't want to injure Jake.' Judge English did not accept Walpole's contention she was unaware putting a cigarette lighter to a man soaked in petrol would set him ablaze. 'I find that position difficult to believe,' she said. Judge English also rejected Walpole's claim she had set out to scare Mr Loader, rather than harm him. 'She threatened to set fire to the victim and she did exactly that,' she said. Further, Walpole should have known the consequences of lighting the petrol would likely be catastrophic - 'which is exactly what occurred'. Judge English found Walpole had engaged in 'nothing short of drug and alcohol-fuelled violence' rather than becoming aggressive due to her depression. Despite Walpole having excellent prospects of rehabilitation and being highly unlikely to reoffend, Judge English said no sentence other than full-time custody would be appropriate for her offending.


The Sun
an hour ago
- The Sun
Qatari camel herder who sexually assaulted woman in UK hospital blames ‘little contact with women in home country'
A QATARI camel herder who sexually assaulted a woman in a UK hospital blamed having "little interaction" with women in his home country. Nasser Al-Gherainiq dragged the victim in a toilet at the Royal Brompton Hospital in Chelsea, South West London. The 27-year-old had come to the UK from his native Qatar to receive treatment for a rare heart condition. Al-Gherainiq, who admitted sexual assault and causing a person to engage in sexual activity without their consent, was also convicted of two counts of attempted rape. He has now been jailed for seven years and will be deported once he is released. His defence lawyer Jane Bickerstaff KC told Southwark Crown Court the fiend would not have had much contact with women outside his family. She said: "Until July 2023 he had never left Qatar. He would have had minimal experience engaging with women outside a family context. "The only woman he would have had any meaningful contact with is his mother." Ms Bickerstaff said his time spent in the Qatar desert had "curtailed his exposure to urban and modern societal norms", She continued: "This defendant would have had no experience whatsoever of interacting with a woman. "We submit that he was equivalent to an immature and inexperienced adolescent. "He completely failed to understand her true feelings." The court was told Al-Gherainiq told the victim he needed to go to the toilet then pulled her inside the cubicle in the August 2023 horror. In a victim impact statement, she told how felt "so scared" and "frozen with fear". She added: "I couldn't go anywhere. Although the incident lasted a few minutes it felt like ages to me. I was very shocked to hear it was only five minutes. "A few days after the incident I had huge anxiety and fear. I could not leave the house. "My life has never been the same. My family still do not know what happened to me. I am so close to my family. "It has been a lonely and isolated year for me. I am not the outgoing woman I used to be. I am withdrawn and highly anxious and overly cautious, especially when I'm on my own in an unfamiliar environment." Judge Adam Hiddleston told Al-Gherainiq, who listened to the sentence through an Arabic interpreter, rejected his plea to impose a lower jail term due to his background. The judge said: "I appreciate the cultural differences between the world in which you grew up and in the United Kingdom. "You knew perfectly well what you were doing was against her wishes." 1