Local newsNews

Police search for missing woman

Tholakele Nokwazi Mnyaka of  Clermont left her home to visit her boyfriend on Saturday, 7 September but never reached her destination, according to the information police received.

KWADABEKA police are looking for a missing 40-year-old woman, Tholakele Nokwazi Mnyaka of  Clermont.  Tholakele was last seen at home on Saturday, 7 September at around 3pm.

ALSO READ: Help family find missing woman

Pinetown Cluster communications officer, Capt Bongumusa Manqele said Tholakele left home to visit her  boyfriend who lives in Motala Farm.

“She was wearing black tights, a black skirt, navy takkies and a black jacket. According to information received, she did not reach her destination,” said Manqele.

Anyone with information that may assist the police can contact KwaDabeka SAPS on 031 711 9932 or Crime Stop on 08600 10111 or D/Cst NJ Khumalo on 073 730 5322.

Do you want to receive alerts regarding this and other Highway community news via Telegram? Send us a Telegram message (not an SMS) with your name and surname (ONLY) to 060 532 5409.

You can also join the conversation on FacebookTwitter and Instagram.

PLEASE NOTE: If you have signed up for our news alerts you need to save the Telegram number as a contact to your phone, otherwise you will not receive our alerts.

Here’s where you can download Telegram on Android or Apple.

To receive our free newsletter click here.

 

At Caxton, we employ humans to generate daily fresh news, not AI intervention. Happy reading!

Support local journalism

Add The Citizen as a preferred source to see more from Highway Mail in Google News and Top Stories.

Sanelisiwe Tsinde

My name is Sanelisiwe Tsinde, and I'm a mother of two boys and very family-oriented. Being a community journalist for years, I can proudly say I love writing about positive community news articles and giving a voice to the voiceless. Seeing people getting assistance warms my heart. Every day is a different challenge and a new learning opportunity. I supply news for our trusted publication weekly, and a few years ago, Caxton ventured into online publication, so I contribute daily to the websites. I could say I am a multimedia journalist, and working in a community newspaper is beneficial as we do not focus on one thing but we do a bit of everything.

Related Articles

Back to top button