Gibson Mhaka
MANY women who are reluctant to trust their female neighbours with their spouse are always accused of being untrusting or paranoid.
But wait until you read the experience of a Bulawayo woman Charity Zvomuya who claimed her longtime neighbour snatched her man.
Zvomuya from Cowdray Park suburb said she felt aching sadness that she was now engaged in a sex-roster fight with her longtime neighbour Khelina Moyo.
She said her happiness was cruelly shattered the day her husband moved out of their matrimonial house to stay with Moyo.
Zvomuya who is also apparently struggling to come to terms with the notion that her long time neighbour was now her husbanda��s second wife described the relationship as a�?ultimate betrayala�?.
a�?Khelina Moyo is my longtime neighbour and she betrayed my trust by snatching my husband. I am surprised that she is now saying I am disturbing her peace by going to her place of residence. Whenever I go to her place of residence I would be pursuing my husband so that he can give me money to buy food for the children,a�? she said.
Zvomuya made the remarks while responding to Moyoa��s claims that she was disturbing her peace by coming to her home to insult and assault her.
In her application for a peace order against Zvomuya, Moyo also exposed a�?hera�? husband as a a�?love croonera�?.
She said her husband had two other wives with Zvomuya being the second and she is the third.
a�?I have serious problems with Charity who is my husbanda��s second wife and I am the third. She is always insulting me with obscenities and coming to my place of residence to cause violence.
a�?At one time she came and broke the door to my house using stones. She is also threatening to kill me with petrol. She is also sending her friends to constantly harass me and I want the court to protect me from her violent behaviour,a�? pleaded Moyo. She further said whenever she meets Zvomuya she spits at her.
In her ruling presiding magistrate Adelaide Mbeure granted a binding order in which she ordered both parties to keep peace with each other by making sure that they do not insult, threaten or assault each other.



