Assault or cover story?
Posted: Thu Feb 17, 2011 12:09 am
Stories like this ("unknown assailant" type) usually seem suspicious to me. He probably hurt himself and was embarrassed so tried to cover it up.
For example, why would he get testicle torsion from an assault and if he was so seriously assaulted why didn't he make it to a hospital prior to the six hours of salvagability window?
http://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/News/ ... d-20110208
Paarl school assault being probed
2011-02-08 10:16
Pupil loses testicle after attack
Ilse Krige, Die Burger
Stellenbosch - The investigation into an alleged attack on a pupil at a top school in Paarl, which resulted in him losing one of his testicles, was intensified on Monday.
Pupils of Paarl Gimnasium were questioned by officials from the Western Cape Education Department (WCED) on Monday morning to establish exactly what had happened.
The school's legal representatives also met with the WCED.
The incident apparently happened in the early hours of last Tuesday morning in a hostel room in House McFarlane. It would appear that an unknown group of people entered 15-year-old Dawid-Hendrik Roux's room and hit him on his private parts, leaving the room in a mess.
Dawid-Hendrik was operated on in Louis Leipoldt Hospital in Bellville, where one of his testicles was removed. He was discharged and is recuperating.
Internal investigation
By Monday afternoon, the chairperson of the school's governing body, Jaco Niemand, informed reporters that the internal investigation was not yet finished and that everything was being done to fast-track the investigation.
He assured the parent community on the school's website that the incident was being viewed in a serious light.
The boy's father, Riaan Roux of Ashton, spoke about Dawid-Hendrik's condition on Monday: "He is a strong boy. His crisis is over, but our hearts (as parents) are not better."
Marelize Potgieter reported that footage from closed circuit TV cameras in the boarding house was being studied.
Paarl police spokesperson Captain Louise du Plessis said to date no party had opened a case at their police station.
Meanwhile, a urologist and lecturer at the Tygerberg campus of the University of Stellenbosch, Dr Andre van der Merwe, said there were about six hours to try and save a testicle once the blood supply had been cut off.
Van der Merwe added: "It is possible for a patient with one normal remaining testicle to still have children."
For example, why would he get testicle torsion from an assault and if he was so seriously assaulted why didn't he make it to a hospital prior to the six hours of salvagability window?
http://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/News/ ... d-20110208
Paarl school assault being probed
2011-02-08 10:16
Pupil loses testicle after attack
Ilse Krige, Die Burger
Stellenbosch - The investigation into an alleged attack on a pupil at a top school in Paarl, which resulted in him losing one of his testicles, was intensified on Monday.
Pupils of Paarl Gimnasium were questioned by officials from the Western Cape Education Department (WCED) on Monday morning to establish exactly what had happened.
The school's legal representatives also met with the WCED.
The incident apparently happened in the early hours of last Tuesday morning in a hostel room in House McFarlane. It would appear that an unknown group of people entered 15-year-old Dawid-Hendrik Roux's room and hit him on his private parts, leaving the room in a mess.
Dawid-Hendrik was operated on in Louis Leipoldt Hospital in Bellville, where one of his testicles was removed. He was discharged and is recuperating.
Internal investigation
By Monday afternoon, the chairperson of the school's governing body, Jaco Niemand, informed reporters that the internal investigation was not yet finished and that everything was being done to fast-track the investigation.
He assured the parent community on the school's website that the incident was being viewed in a serious light.
The boy's father, Riaan Roux of Ashton, spoke about Dawid-Hendrik's condition on Monday: "He is a strong boy. His crisis is over, but our hearts (as parents) are not better."
Marelize Potgieter reported that footage from closed circuit TV cameras in the boarding house was being studied.
Paarl police spokesperson Captain Louise du Plessis said to date no party had opened a case at their police station.
Meanwhile, a urologist and lecturer at the Tygerberg campus of the University of Stellenbosch, Dr Andre van der Merwe, said there were about six hours to try and save a testicle once the blood supply had been cut off.
Van der Merwe added: "It is possible for a patient with one normal remaining testicle to still have children."