A night of secret pleasure and sexsual satisfaction came to an abrupt halt, last Saturday at a Dar es Salaam hotel for a local pensioner, Mr David Mluli (80), who died in the arms of his 33 year old girlfriend Ms Neema Kibaya.
According to police reports, Mr Mluli reportedly collapsed and died suddenly on Saturday while he was in room number 22 at Mbezi Garden Hotel in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. He was apparently having a secret rendezvous with Ms Kibaya.
Sources clearly claim the two had arrived separately at the hotel with Mluli arriving first before his partner in crime. Witnesses also suggested that Mr Mluli could have died from exhaustion upon the reasons that he was too old to match a young and energetic woman in a marathon horizontal gymnastic match.
The Kinondoni Regional Police Commander, Mr Ramadhan Kingai, confirmed the incident yesterday. He told the media that the police force received a phone call from Mbezi Garden Hotel manager Newton Mkonda on January 16 at around 3pm. The caller informed the law enforcers of the sudden death of a client at the hotel who had occupied room number 22.
“The police arrived at the area and found Mr Mluli’s body along with a woman who identified herself as Neema Kibaya. Ms Kibaya told the police of the love affair she had with the deceased,” Mr Kingai said.
Police then took the body to Mwananyamala Hospital for post-mortem while Ms Kibaya, a resident of Goba and a businesswoman, has been detained. Preliminary investigations, he said, showed that Mr Mluli could have died from a normal death because his body shows no signs that there was any form of confrontation between him and any other person prior to the death.
“There were no direct physical signs that could have been noted as doubtful with exception of his underwears getting wet before he passed away,” said Mr Kingai.
While searching in the room, police found out that Mr Mluli was in possession of Sh37,000, his national identification card and Tecno mobile handset.
Medical experts at the Mwananyamala Hospital will conduct a post-mortem as soon as his relatives have shown up.
“Post-mortem protocols demand the presence of a relative of the deceased who has to identify the body before burial preparations,” suggested Mr Kingai.