The Dewanis dinner reservation was not for Strand. It was for 96 Winery Road in Somerset West. The downmarket surfside restaurant at Strand was a last minute change of dinner plan decision by the Dewanis.
You have now stated for a fifth time that it was bizarre that Dewani gave the taxi driver money for the helicopter, despite myself and other posters correcting you every time. Dewani did not give the helicopter money to the taxi driver. Even the taxi driver (Tongo) doesn't make this claim, yet you continue to say it as though it is a fact. People like you are precisely the reason why we built our site; you perpetuate misinformation with reckless disregard.
Turning to Jonah Fisher's BBC article - http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-12229112
Nowhere does it quote Dewani as saying that the trip to Gugulethu "was Anni's idea". It merely says that Anni wanted to see the real Africa. Dewani later expanded on this and explained that Tongo had made some suggestions as to what they might want to see and that Anni had liked the township idea as she wanted to see "the real Africa".
As for your suggestion that the spontaneous decision meant that it would not have been possible for Tongo to coordinate with the hijackers, this is yet another of your disingenuous claims bereft of logic. Tongo was in constant phone and text contact with Mbolombo, who was coordinating with the hijackers. The only reason the eventual hijacking ended up occuring was due to Tongo's continuous use of texts to liase and confirm with Mbolombo that the Dewanis had agreed to his suggestion to go see Gugulethu a second time (the first trip to Mzolis was a 5 minute drive by and a u turn). Mbolombo then made sure the hijackers were in position for the second pass through Gugulethu, which was when the hijacking took place.
I'm surprised you overlooked this in the BBC article:
"Shrien Dewani then told me that it was Anni who wanted to go to the township"Somerset West is effectively a suburb of Strand: they run into each other. For the purpose of the point I was making it is utterly immaterial which place she had dinner in - the
point was she was
not dressed for a late night visit to a Township. She was going to have dinner in a nice restaurant with a view: that can in no ways be described as "the real Africa" that Dewani told the BBC reporter Anni had wanted to see. There is nothing to indicate Anni would want to drive off the main road and round some unlit deserted streets of 2-room bungalows of poor people at 10.45pm, especially if she had already driven around them earlier.
It is a fact that when Dewani thought the anonymous 'African Man' killers had vanished into the night never to be seen again, he told a BBC reporter that
(a) It was spontaneous
and
(b) It was Anni's idea.
I have provided you with a link and the text to the full interview: I cannot understand why you ignored it the first time and are now denying the respected news reporter was telling the truth - other posters on the thread said they believed the reporter. Nor can I understand why you think this is a minor point.
If what he said was true, the hijacking could only have been opportunistic, there is no way Tongo could have pre-arranged it. It can only have been a case of being in the wrong place at the wrong time - which is, of course, what Dewani thought it would look like too.
As soon as the SAPS pulled in the actual hijackers his cover was blown: he thought amongst millions of other 'African Men' they would never be found. He immediately had to change the story slightly - a slight change in story but a huge change in significance - because if there was any evidence they had planned the attack it would contradict the story that it was Anni's idea and spontaneous. So he said Tongo had suggested it
You simply choose to ignore this, even though it's pivotal in making him look complicit with the murder. Everything else can be explained away, but not that.
As for your petty insults about
my logic: the hijackers could
not have carried out the hijacking
anywhere - hijackings occur at places where vehicles stop (for this reason most South Africans don't stop at traffic lights at night) so they could not have hijacked the Dewanis on the main highway from Strand to Cape Town -
otherwise they would have.The BBC reporter is quite clear: this wasn't some bereft incoherent man, dazed and confused about details: Dewani was an angry man correcting the 'facts'.