Man jailed for killing girlfriend in jealous rage

Bea Swallow
BBC News, Gloucestershire
Gloucestershire Police A police mugshot of Tanaka Zivanai. He is wearing a grey t-shirt and standing against a grey background. He has brown eyes, a dark beard and moustache, and is looking straight at the camera with a blank expression.Gloucestershire Police
Zivanai was sentenced to life in prison for the "horrific" murder of his girlfriend

A jealous boyfriend who brutally murdered his partner after wrongly believing she was having an affair has been jailed for life.

Tanaka Zivanai, 32, was sentenced at Bristol Crown Court on Thursday to life with a minimum of 20 years and 10 months' imprisonment.

Zanele Sibanda, 28, was attacked in the street during the early morning hours of 27 August in Tredworth, Gloucestershire, in front of multiple shocked onlookers.

A post-mortem examination found the mother-of-two died from multiple stab wounds to the head, throat, body and arms.

Family photograph Zanele Sibanda wearing a short-sleeved, pink patterned blouse and pink skirt. She is sitting in front of a brown brick wall and looking off to the left of the camera. Her black hair is twisted into shoulder-length locks with a few wooden beads secured at the top. Family photograph
Ms Sibanda began a relationship with Zivanai after they got jobs as care workers

Robin Shellard, prosecuting, said the murder was the culmination of an argument which had started the previous evening, in which the defendant had accused his partner of cheating.

"Tanaka Zivanai murdered his partner, Zanele Sibanda, on the streets of Gloucester in front of a number of members of public after showing signs of jealousy, accusing her of infidelity, and arguing with her," he told the court.

"He brutally assaulted her with a knife he had brought with him from his home, leaving her with multiple stab wounds which caused her to die at the scene of the assault."

The court heard the Zimbabwe-born defendant and Ms Sibanda, who was from South Africa, had arrived separately in the UK in 2023 but began a relationship after getting jobs as care workers.

They moved into a flat together in Tredworth, where neighbours would often hear a man shouting and a woman crying.

On one occasion, neighbours heard the defendant shouting, accusing her of sleeping with someone else.

On another occasion, Ms Sibanda was visiting a friend when the defendant phoned her and shouted: "I'll kill you if you come here, don't come back to this house."

A group of people dressed in black stand in a circle around a tree, at the foot of which they have laid floral tributes.
Zanele Sibanda's friends and colleagues said she "always had a smile on her face"

On the evening of the murder, CCTV in the local area captured a man and woman shouting in the street and frequently returning to a nearby flat.

A short time later, neighbours heard a woman screaming and saw a man kneeling on the ground with a woman in his lap, with him pleading: "Wake up, get up, get up."

"Another neighbour called the police as he had seen the man with his hand over the woman's mouth and then stabbed her repeatedly," Mr Shellard said.

"He described how the defendant started to cut himself.

"His brother also saw the attack and had heard an argument about a visa and the woman saying how she was going to make him go back home."

Det Ch Insp Wayne Usher from Gloucestershire Police's Major Crimes Unit said: "We suspect Zivanai had his status in the UK threatened, which led him to carry out this savage and premeditated act of extreme violence.

"I welcome the sentence handed to Zivanai and hope that Zanele's loved ones can now find some closure as they try and rebuild their lives without her."

Nonkanyiso Tshuma standing outside Bristol Crown Court, wearing a black and white striped top and a metallic coat with a white fur lined collar. She has her hair in braids and tied back, and is looking at the camera with a forlorn expression.
Ms Sibanda's sister, Nonkanyiso Tshuma, said the conviction "won't bring Zanela back"

Speaking outside court, Nonkanyiso Tshuma said she had always imagined coming to the UK for the first time to attend her sister's graduation - not her murder trial.

"A two-year-old and a nine-year-old have to live today without their mother because of another, it's so heartbreaking" she said.

"Zivanai isn't even showing any signs of remorse. It's a hard pill to swallow."

'Horrific killing'

Sentencing Zivanai to life in prison, Judge William Hart said: "You were angry and aggressive, and she was cowed by your behaviour.

"You appear to have become convinced that she was in some form of relationship, perhaps an affair, with another man.

"That was, as far as the evidence indicates, a wholly groundless suspicion and that form of jealousy appears to have been a feature of much of your relationship.

"The circumstances of this poor young woman's killing were horrific," he added.

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