The courtroom fell into that familiar, measured stillness as the magistrate delivered a ruling that shifts the course of the trial without yet deciding its end.
In the matter involving John Nundwe aka John General, the court has found that the prosecution has established a prima facie case, sufficient, at this stage, to require John General to defend himself.
Had the evidence fallen short, the law would have demanded his immediate acquittal.
It did not.
Instead, the court has called upon the accused to respond.
This finding follows the close of the prosecution’s case, which included both factual and expert testimony placed before the court.
A ruling of “case to answer” does not determine guilt. It marks a threshold, one that separates speculation from a case that must now be tested by the defence.
John Nundwe now stands at a procedural crossroads, with three clear options before him:
• To give sworn evidence, taking the witness stand under oath and subjecting himself to cross-examination;
• To make an unsworn statement, from the dock, unchallenged, but carrying less evidential weight;
• To remain silent, exercising his right not to testify, a silence the court cannot interpret against him; and
• He may also choose to call witnesses in his defence, or call none at all.
Each path carries its own risks, its own weight, its own strategy.
Following the ruling, defence counsel requested time to consult with the accused and fully explain these options, a request the State did not oppose.
The court granted the adjournment.
Proceedings will resume on Tuesday, April 21, 2026, when the defence is expected to inform the court on how it will proceed and indicate when it will open its case.
For now, the matter moves from accusation to answer.
And in that transition, the trial enters its most closely watched phase. The critical often less understood phase outside legal circles. This is the phase where the case is tested, challenged and ultimately shaped.
Follow the National Prosecution Authority’s official platforms for verified updates on this matter.