A Danish national accused of assault for mutilating several women and keeping their removed clitorises in his freezer appeared in a South African court on Wednesday to fight for bail.
Peter Frederiksen, a 63-year-old gun shop owner, was arrested in the central city of Bloemfontein in September after his wife told police that he assaulted her and mutilated her genitals.
When police officers searched Frederiksen’s modest brick townhouse, they discovered more than 10 frozen pieces from at least seven female genitals, as well as pornographic photographs of children, investigators said.
His diaries from 2004 recounting genital mutilation on women were also found, along with anesthetic drugs, surgical equipment and two pieces of dried female genitals hung on a hook.
Frederiksen’s wife, Anna Matseliso Molise, 28, was set to be the state’s key witness before she was gunned down last month outside her house in Maseru, the capital of Lesotho, a two-hour drive from Bloemfontein.
Before her death, she told police she was drugged with laced champagne when she was mutilated.
Frederiksen, who has two children with Molise, sat alert in the dock at the Bloemfontein Magistrates’ Court with his arms across his chest and his ankles bound by a chain.
Judge Marlene Marais ruled that, in terms of granting bail, Frederiksen’s case came under the same category as murder and rape.
He faces a litany of charges, including three counts of assault, conspiracy to commit murder, bigamy, and possession, production and distribution of child pornography.
He also faces charges in connection with the illegal removal of human tissue.
Frederiksen, who has yet to enter a plea, declined to talk to the press, but his attorney Luthando Tshangana said: “We are confident that he still has the possibility of getting bail.”
The court’s public gallery was packed with members of the African National Congress Women’s League, the ruling party’s women’s wing.
“We are here to make sure justice is served,” Joyce Davids said. “This is not a traditional practice, none of us went through this process. If it was a cultural thing a black man would be doing it, not a man from Denmark... I hope he rots in jail.”
Police have issued an appeal for Frederiksen’s alleged victims to come forward.
The state yesterday attempted to show he should be denied bail, arguing that he was in South Africa on fraudulent documents.
Frederiksen, who in the past pleaded guilty to illegally transporting elephant tusks, was expected to take the witness stand later yesterday to make his case for bail, a member of his legal team said.
The small courtroom was patrolled by police carrying automatic rifles and wearing bullet-proof vests.
No one has been arrested for the murder of Frederiksen’s wife.
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