It usually
takes long for trust to be built in a relationship. When two individuals are
starting out in a relationship, it is expected that occasional doubts and suspicion
will creep in from time to time because they are still trying to get along.
However,
after being in a relationship for a long time, one should expect a certain
level trust, understanding, and tolerance between the couple. They ought to
have known themselves in such a way that if they can no longer stand each
other’s shortcomings, they have to peacefully go their separate ways.
This was not
the case with a Birmingham couple whereby a husband, Norbert Chikerema, 43,
reportedly hired a detective to trail his wife, Nyasha Kahari, 35, on the suspicion
that she had been cheating with other men.
After receiving
some video recordings of his wife’s movements and engagements, the suspecting
man drove his wife in a Nissan car to go visiting at about 7.30 pm in January.
The couple
visited three addresses and as they drove home, Chikerema attacked his wife
with a number of weapons, including an axe, hence bludgeoning her to death. The
man later drove the woman’s lifeless body to a Lidl car park and left the car
there with his wife inside. Investigators later found the woman’s body in the
car strapped in her seat belt.
Birmingham
Crown Court heard that the husband struck his wife over 40 times while she was
strapped in the passengers sit without any means of escape. Court also heard
that the said attack happened at about 11 pm after which the man further
attacked 2 other cars belonging to men he believed had been having affairs with
his wife.
Reportedly,
the suspect later returned home to change his attire which had been stained
with blood and then drove the victim’s body to the car park at about 4 am.
Norbert
Chikerema, a care home boss from Quinton, denied the allegation of murder
brought against him on the possible basis of ‘abnormality of mind function at
the time’. The trial has not yet been concluded.
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