A murder case that shocked Mossel Bay and drew national attention has reached a major cross-border breakthrough after police confirmed that two suspects were arrested in Mozambique in connection with the deaths of Dina and Ernst Marais, the Western Cape couple who were reported missing after entering the Kruger National Park to celebrate Dina’s birthday, before their bodies were later found near the Levubu River and their stolen Ford Ranger was traced across the border.
Police have confirmed a major breakthrough in the murder investigation of Mossel Bay couple Dina and Ernst Marais, with two suspects arrested in Mozambique.
The arrests mark the first major public development in a case Cape Town News has been tracking since the couple were found dead after entering the Kruger National Park last month.
Dina Marais, 73, and Ernst Marais, 71, were from Mossel Bay. According to police information reported by IOL, the couple entered the Kruger National Park on 17 May to celebrate Dina’s birthday.
They were later reported missing at the Pafuri picnic site after concern grew over their whereabouts.
Their bodies were found on 22 May floating at Cross Corner, on the banks of the Levubu River near the Limpopo River intersection.
Their vehicle, a double-cab green Ford Ranger, was missing.
The case immediately raised serious questions because it involved elderly Western Cape visitors, one of South Africa’s best-known national parks, a missing vehicle, a cross-border route and a violent outcome far from home.
Police Confirm Two Arrests In Mozambique
Limpopo police spokesperson Brigadier Hlulani Mashaba confirmed that two suspects had been arrested in Mozambique after a coordinated investigation.
The suspects are aged 32 and 33 and have been identified as Mozambican nationals.
According to Mashaba, the cross-border investigation involved the South African Police Service, Mozambican law enforcement authorities, SANParks and other role players.
The recovery of the couple’s stolen Ford Ranger was central to the breakthrough.
Mashaba said the vehicle was recovered in Chókwè, Mozambique, on 26 May. That recovery led to the arrest of the first suspect in Chókwè on 1 June. The second suspect was later arrested in Xai-Xai city, in Gaza province, on 2 June.
Police say the suspects have been positively linked to the crime.
That confirmation is significant because it moves the case from a murder investigation with a missing vehicle to a cross-border criminal case with suspects in custody.
Suspects Expected To Appear In Maputo Court
The suspects are expected to appear in court in Maputo, Mozambique.
Police say they face two counts of murder and hijacking. Additional charges may be added as the investigation continues.
This means the case is now moving into a legal process across borders.
Cape Town News will continue tracking whether the suspects are prosecuted in Mozambique, whether South African authorities pursue further cooperation, and whether any extradition or mutual legal assistance process becomes part of the case.
At this stage, the confirmed public position is that the suspects were arrested in Mozambique and are expected to appear in court in Maputo.
Why This Update Matters For The Western Cape
Although the murders happened in Limpopo, the case remains directly relevant to the Western Cape because Dina and Ernst Marais were from Mossel Bay.
Their deaths affected a Western Cape community and raised fears among South Africans who travel to national parks, especially older travellers and families who visit remote areas.
The arrests also matter because this was not a simple local investigation. The suspects were found in another country, and the vehicle was recovered across the border.
That makes the case an example of how violent crime can move across provincial and national boundaries, requiring cooperation between police, border authorities, conservation agencies and foreign law enforcement.
For the families and community affected by the murders, the arrests do not undo the loss. But they do represent movement in the investigation and the beginning of a possible path toward justice.
Cross-Border Police Work Praised
Limpopo Police Commissioner Lieutenant General Thembi Hadebe praised the work of all stakeholders involved in the investigation.
Hadebe said the arrests marked a significant milestone and showed the value of cross-border cooperation in combating serious and violent crime.
She also thanked Mozambican law enforcement authorities, SANParks and other role players whose efforts contributed to the breakthrough.
Her statement is important because the case relied on more than one agency. SAPS alone could not complete the process without cooperation from Mozambican authorities once the vehicle and suspects were traced outside South Africa.
SANParks’ involvement also matters because the couple disappeared after entering the Kruger National Park, making park security, visitor safety and coordination with police part of the broader picture.
A Case That Raised Visitor Safety Concerns
The murders of Dina and Ernst Marais caused deep concern because of the setting.
Kruger National Park is one of South Africa’s most recognised tourism destinations. Many visitors see it as a place of family holidays, wildlife viewing and national pride.
When violent crime is linked to a park visit, the public concern is immediate.
The case also involved elderly victims, a missing vehicle and the discovery of bodies in a remote area. Those details made the investigation especially distressing for people following the story from Mossel Bay and elsewhere in the country.
Cape Town News is treating this article as an update, not as a new standalone murder story. The key new development is the arrest of two suspects, the recovery of the vehicle and the expected court process in Mozambique.
That distinction matters because responsible reporting must follow cases through the justice process without simply repeating tragedy.
What Investigators Have Confirmed So Far
The confirmed facts now include several key points.
Dina and Ernst Marais were from Mossel Bay.
They entered the Kruger National Park on 17 May.
They were reported missing at the Pafuri picnic site.
Their bodies were found on 22 May at Cross Corner, near the Levubu River and Limpopo River intersection.
Their green double-cab Ford Ranger was missing.
The vehicle was recovered in Chókwè, Mozambique, on 26 May.
Two suspects, aged 32 and 33, were arrested in Mozambique.
Police say the suspects are positively linked to the crime.
They face charges linked to murder and hijacking, with possible additional charges as the investigation continues.
These are the verified points that give the case its current legal shape.
What Still Needs To Be Confirmed
Several important questions remain unanswered.
Police have not yet publicly detailed the full sequence of events leading to the couple’s deaths.
It is also not yet clear whether the suspects will be prosecuted entirely in Mozambique or whether South African authorities may pursue further legal steps.
The possible addition of further charges also needs to be tracked.
Cape Town News will also watch for any further statements from SAPS, SANParks, Mozambican authorities and prosecutors as the court process begins.
Another key question is whether investigators believe more people were involved.
At this stage, Cape Town News will not speculate beyond the police-confirmed arrests and charges.
Why Follow-Up Reporting Matters
This update is part of Cape Town News’s commitment to follow important stories beyond the first report.
Many crime stories are reported when tragedy happens, but then disappear from public attention before arrests, bail hearings, court appearances, convictions or sentences are known.
That leaves readers with the trauma of the crime but not the accountability trail.
Cape Town News will continue treating unresolved crime and court stories as open files where there is clear Western Cape relevance.
The Marais case now moves from the discovery of two bodies and a missing vehicle into the court and prosecution phase. That is a major change in status.
For readers in Mossel Bay and the wider Western Cape, the important questions now are whether the suspects appear as expected, what charges are confirmed in court, whether additional suspects are identified, and how the cross-border legal process unfolds.
What Cape Town News Will Track Next
Cape Town News will continue monitoring the Maputo court appearance, any further SAPS statements, additional charges, and whether South African authorities provide more information about the prosecution process.
The next important update should confirm whether the suspects appeared in court, whether they remain in custody, what charges were placed on the record, and whether any cooperation process between South African and Mozambican authorities continues.
For now, the key development is clear: two suspects have been arrested, the stolen vehicle has been recovered, and police say the arrests mark a major cross-border breakthrough in the murders of Dina and Ernst Marais.
Q&A:
Who were Dina and Ernst Marais?
Dina Marais, 73, and Ernst Marais, 71, were a couple from Mossel Bay in the Western Cape.
Where were they killed?
Their bodies were found at Cross Corner, on the banks of the Levubu River near the Limpopo River intersection, after they had entered the Kruger National Park.
Why were they in the Kruger National Park?
Police information reported by IOL says the couple entered the park on 17 May to celebrate Dina Marais’s birthday.
What happened to their vehicle?
Their double-cab green Ford Ranger was missing after their bodies were found. Police later confirmed that the vehicle was recovered in Chókwè, Mozambique.
How many suspects have been arrested?
Two suspects have been arrested in Mozambique.
What are the suspects facing?
Police say the suspects face two counts of murder and hijacking. Additional charges may be added as the investigation continues.
Where will the suspects appear in court?
The suspects are expected to appear in court in Maputo, Mozambique.
Why is this a Western Cape story?
The murders happened outside the Western Cape, but Dina and Ernst Marais were from Mossel Bay. The case directly affects a Western Cape community and is being followed as a Cape Town News crime update.
What is the next follow-up point?
Cape Town News will track the Maputo court appearance, whether the suspects remain in custody, any additional charges, and further updates from SAPS, SANParks or Mozambican authorities.
SAI Search Summary:
Two suspects have been arrested in Mozambique in connection with the murders of Mossel Bay couple Dina and Ernst Marais, who were killed after entering the Kruger National Park in May. Police say the couple’s stolen Ford Ranger was recovered in Chókwè, Mozambique, leading to the arrest of the first suspect there, while the second suspect was arrested in Xai-Xai city in Gaza province. The suspects, aged 32 and 33, are expected to appear in court in Maputo on charges linked to murder and hijacking. Cape Town News is treating this as an update to a previously reported Western Cape-linked crime story and will continue tracking the court process and any further charges.
Source: IOL – Robin-Lee Francke.

