• The court imposed a 105-year prison term for rape, aggravated robbery, and housebreaking with intent to rape, underscoring the severity of Malinga’s crimes.
  • Survivors describe lasting trauma and fear, while the prosecution highlights repeat offending and violation of constitutional rights to safety.
  • Beyond imprisonment, Malinga is barred from working with children, added to the National Register for Sex Offenders, and declared unfit to possess firearms.

The Elukwatini Regional Court closed a violent chapter on Monday, 19 January 2026, sentencing 40-year-old Wonder Thulani Malinga to an effective 105 years behind bars.

Malinga was convicted on three counts of rape, three counts of aggravated robbery, and three counts of housebreaking with intent to rape.

According to Mpumalanga NPA spokesperson Monica Nyuswa, Malinga’s reign of terror spanned from March to October 2019, targeting young women living alone in the Nhlazatshe area.

“Using a calculated approach, Malinga would break into homes disguised in a balaclava and use a bush knife to threaten his victims into submission,” Nyuswa said.

“In one particularly harrowing incident in March 2019, he assaulted a 17-year-old girl inside her parents’ home. He later targeted two more women, aged 21 and 22, robbing them of their mobile phones. One of the stolen devices was eventually discovered in the possession of Malinga’s girlfriend.”

Despite his efforts to conceal his identity, Malinga was ultimately identified by a third victim. DNA analysis subsequently linked him to the other crime scenes, firmly establishing the case against him.

Court dismantles false claims

Throughout the trial, Malinga maintained a plea of not guilty, insisting the sexual encounters were consensual and claiming to have been in relationships with the victims. State Prosecutor Mxolisi Biyela dismantled these assertions using victim testimony, forensic evidence, and recovered property.

“The evidence clearly showed a pattern of deliberate, repeated attacks designed to terrorize young women in their own homes,” Biyela said.

The prosecution further emphasised that Malinga was a repeat offender with a history of similar crimes. Survivors’ statements revealed the grim reality of ongoing psychological trauma, including flashbacks, nightmares, and a persistent fear of being alone. The court found that his actions constituted a deliberate violation of the victims’ constitutional rights to safety.

Landmark sentence and ongoing protections

In a decisive ruling against gender-based violence, the court handed down 15 years for each count of rape, 15 years for each count of aggravated robbery, and 5 years for each count of housebreaking.

Beyond the life-spanning prison term, Malinga has been officially barred from working with children, added to the National Register for Sex Offenders, and declared unfit to possess firearms.

Nyuswa reaffirmed the NPA’s commitment to protecting the constitutional rights of all citizens by vigorously prosecuting those who commit acts of sexual violence.

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