Friday, 5 February 2016

Unbelievable! Woman Believe To Be Dead Show Up On Her Own Funeral to Attack Husband Who Paid Hitmen to Kill Her

Noela Rukundo

A woman left people utterly socked and running away in fear when she turned up for her own funeral to attack her husband who had paid to have her killed. 

A woman gave her husband the fright of his life by turning up to her own funeral after he had arranged to have her killed.

Mirror Online writes that the husband, Balenga Kalala, of Melbourne, paid a team of hitmen £3,500 to take out his wife Noela Rukundo because he thought she was cheating on him.

Kalala, who has lived in Australia since arriving as a refugee from the Democratic Republic of Congo in 2004, planned to have the mother of his three children murdered as she attended her stepmother’s funeral in Burundi early last year.

But the gunmen didn’t want to kill a woman and knew Ms Rukundo’s brother, so they told her what her husband had done and even handed over recorded phone conversations and a payment receipt for the blood money.

The hitmen then told Kalala the deed was done, and he informed the family she died in an accident in Africa.

Balenga Kalala

But Ms Rukundo travelled home and went to her own ‘funeral’, waiting as the mourners left before confronting her murderous partner.

“Is it my eyes?” she recalled him saying in an interview with the Washington Post . “Is it a ghost?”

“Surprise! I’m still alive!” she replied the man

Kalala then touched her shoulder and then began screaming running back. 

He initially denied his crime, but Rukundo got him to confess during a phone conversation that was secretly recorded by cops.

“I felt like somebody who had risen again,” she told the BBC . “My situation, my past life? That is gone. I’m starting a new life now. I will stand up like a strong woman.”

Kalala was sentenced to nine years in prison. After Kalala's conviction, Ms Rukundo's son Fostin told ABC his mother still lived in fear.

"She works for us, she feeds us, she clothed us and she was doing the same thing for [Kalala]. I looked at him (in court) but I couldn't see a man. Because I believe a man would not do something like that."

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