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The boyfriend of a South African woman, whose murder galvanised protests against violence against women in the country, has been charged with her murder at a court in Johannesburg.
Ntuthuko Ntokozo Shoba is accused of planning Tshegofatso Pule's murder and paying the killer.
The body of the pregnant 28-year-old was found hanging from a tree two years ago, with multiple stab wounds.
Mr Shoba was not asked to enter a plea during his court appearance.
Last week, a Johannesburg court sentenced another man, Mzikayise Malephane, to 20 years in prison after he pleaded guilty to murdering Pule.
In a plea agreement read out in court by his lawyer, Malephane, 31, said he had been offered 7,000 rand (ÂŁ340; $480) by Mr Shoba to carry out the killing but had declined. The offer went up to 70,000 rand before he accepted, he said.
Malephane told the court that Mr Shoba "did not want his wife to find out about the unborn baby."
Prosecutors have charged Mr Shoba, who was arrested last week, with murder, conspiracy to commit murder, and defeating the ends of justice.
The 32-year-old, whose legs were shackled, wore an all-black suit and shirt in his first court appearance on Monday, news site TimesLive reported.

Pule's uncle Tumisang Katake said that seeing Mr Shoba in court reopened "old wounds that were beginning to heal."
He added that the family knew that Pule was dating Mr Shoba, but did not know "what type of relationship they had."
According to the family, she had gone to see Mr Shoba in his house in Florida on the West Rand district, 16km (nine miles) west of Johannesburg, in June 2019, after he invited her to go shopping for the unborn baby, news24 reports.
They got into an argument and he later called a taxi whose driver turned out to be Malephane.
On 5 June Pule's body was found hanging from a tree in Roodepoort area in the West Rand district.

Her death was widely condemned and inspired the hashtag #JusticeForTshego on Twitter.
In response, President Cyril Ramaphosa released a statement denouncing gender-based violence, saying the pandemic had made it more dangerous for women because "violent men are taking advantage of the eased restrictions on movement to attack women and children".
As many as 51% of women in South Africa had experienced violence at the hands of someone they were in a relationship with, the president's statement said.
Following an outcry over a spate of femicides the year before, President Ramaphosa said South Africa was one of "the most unsafe places in the world to be a woman".
Mr Shoba's case has been postponed until 1 March when a formal bail application will be heard.
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