Nearly eleven years have passed since Senzo Meyiwa, once the heartbeat of South African football, was shot dead inside a modest Vosloorus home.
Eleven years of rumours, arrests, court battles, and family heartbreaks. Yet, as the state finally closes its murder case against five men accused of killing him, the name at the centre of the storm, Kelly Khumalo; his girlfriend that night, has never once taken the stand.
A rising star silenced
On October 26, 2014, Meyiwa, then captain of Bafana Bafana and Orlando Pirates, was visiting the home of his girlfriend Kelly Khumalo, one of South Africa’s most famous singers. That evening, Meyiwa’s life ended with a single gunshot wound to the chest.
The official story at the time painted the killing as a robbery gone wrong.
According to those inside the house, which included Khumalo, her mother, sister, Meyiwa’s friends, and Khumalo’s children, two armed men stormed in demanding phones and wallets.
A scuffle followed, a gun went off, and Meyiwa was dead on the kitchen floor.
But almost immediately, South Africa smelled something deeper. How does a house full of people, all intimately connected to Senzo, end up offering such hazy, sometimes contradictory accounts?
Why did the case stall for years while his grieving family pleaded for justice?
From simple robbery to whispers of a plot
In the years that followed, cracks appeared in the “robbery” version. Some investigators and journalists pointed out that nothing valuable was actually stolen, apart from a single cellphone.
In 2020, nearly six years after the shooting, police arrested five men. But in a bombshell twist, an alleged confession from one of the accused hinted that the killing wasn’t a random break-in; it was a hit.
At the centre of this alleged plot – Kelly Khumalo
Leaked affidavits and call records suggested she had been in contact with one or more of the suspects before and after the murder.
In court, defence lawyers claimed a contract killing was ordered and arranged by people close to Meyiwa.
Khumalo has always denied any involvement. To this day, she maintains her innocence, insisting she lost the love of her life that night and had nothing to gain from his death.
Meanwhile, her music career has continued to flourish, sparking more resentment from those who believe she knows more than she ever told the police or the public.
A trial riddled with confusion
When the murder trial finally began in 2022, many assumed Khumalo would be called to testify, either by the state or by the defence.
Instead, the courtroom has mostly heard from forensic experts, investigating officers, ballistic specialists, and other witnesses.
The testimony has often raised more questions than answers about bungled evidence, missing cellphones, and sloppy police work.
Yet through it all, Khumalo has remained outside the witness box. Her name surfaces in cross-examinations, her phone records are debated, but her own words under oath have never been heard.
On Thursday, July 24, 2025, State Prosecutor Advocate George Baloyi announced that the State was officially closing its case.
After three years of evidence, the prosecution claims it has presented sufficient evidence to convict the five men on trial.
For Meyiwa’s family and countless South Africans, that claim is hard to swallow when the one person many see as the key to the whole puzzle never faced direct questions in open court.
Why did the state not call her?
Legal analysts say there could be multiple reasons. Some believe the prosecution feared her testimony might collapse under cross-examination, introducing new contradictions. Others argue they simply lacked the evidence to directly implicate her.
But for ordinary South Africans, and for Senzo Meyiwa’s grieving family, the decision leaves a bitter taste: how can the state claim to have pursued truth without hearing from the woman who shared his bed, his daughter, and the final terrifying minutes of his life?
The defence now has its turn, and may still choose to call Khumalo. But many doubt they will.
In the eyes of the public, it means the biggest questions about Meyiwa’s death may never be asked where they matter most: under oath, in a courtroom.
FKA/AE
Meanwhile, watch as football fans question FIFA’s move to scrap penalty rebound rule