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By Citizen Reporter

Journalist


Man who held up Menlyn Maine demanding R10m planted a fake bomb

The complex, which was evacuated due to the bomb threat, has now been declared safe.


The man arrested at Menlyn Maine after a bomb threat at an Absa bank had planted a fake bomb, police have confirmed.

Police spokesperson Captain Colette Weilbach told The Citizen the centre had now been declared safe following this discovery.

“The 50-year-old suspect from Garsfontein will face an additional charge of attempted bank robbery,” Weilbach said.

The alleged perpetrator demanded R10 million, reportedly threatening to detonate a bomb he claimed he had planted at a nearby location if he didn’t receive it.

The complex was evacuated as a result.

Weilbach confirmed the incident in a statement earlier on Tuesday.

“The South African Police Service (SAPS) Brooklyn arrested a man after he made an alleged bomb threat at a shopping centre in the East of Pretoria.

“On Tuesday, 17 September 2019 at around 11.15am, an unknown man in his fifties entered a bank at the Menlyn Maine Shopping Centre. He handed a note over to the bank teller who assisted him. The note contained a threat to say that there is a bomb planted inside the bank.

“The security immediately reacted and evacuated the whole shopping centre. The SAPS responded and arrested the man inside the bank. A firearm was confiscated.

“The SAPS bomb disposal and K9 units were called out and are still on the scene to inspect a device that was found. The shopping centre is not declared as safe yet.

“The man will be charged with contravention of the Explosive Act No 26 of 1956 for making a false threat. He will appear in the Hatfield Community Court soon,” the statement concludes.

(Compiled by Daniel Friedman.)

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