A murder trial at the Bulawayo High Court had to be moved to a different courtroom after an uninvited guest took over the space and refused to budge.
The strange sequence of events unfolded during a special court session on June 3, 2026, when a stray cat entered the room, caused a disturbance, and set off an odd confrontation involving police officers, prison guards, and court staff.
The National Prosecuting Authority of Zimbabwe reported that the animal made its way slowly into the courtroom before crying out loudly, bringing the hearing to a halt.
“There was drama at the Bulawayo High Court special sitting on the 3rd of June 2026 when a brown stray cat slowly walked into the courtroom and unleashed a mournful, ear-piercing wail, disrupting proceedings.” The interruption became so serious that the judge briefly suspended the matter and instructed that the cat be removed.
What followed turned into an extraordinary scene. According to the NPAZ, multiple officials were brought in to handle the feline intruder. “A comical scene unfolded in the courtroom as 4 police officers and 4 prison guards and the caretaker, tried to force the cat out.”
As news spread, curious bystanders gathered at the courtroom door to watch. The increasing number of onlookers only seemed to make things worse. “The growing audience only worsened the cat’s stage fright.”
Instead of exiting, the cat darted across the room, moving from behind the defendant’s dock toward the judge’s bench. The animal ultimately found a hiding spot under the judge’s desk. “The cat neatly tucked itself under the judge’s bench and responded in a hostile manner to further attempts made to remove it.”
After several failed attempts to get the cat out, court officials made the unusual call to leave the room entirely. The authority described it as a successful “hostile takeover” by the cat. “It was successful in its hostile takeover of the courtroom which was then abandoned and the matter continued to be heard in a different courtroom.” The disruption happened during the trial of Bright Tshuma, 19, from Nkulumane in Bulawayo, who was facing a murder charge.
Despite the chaos, the trial resumed after moving to another courtroom. The NPAZ said Tshuma was accused of stabbing a man to death with what it called a Colombia CCCP AK47 knife. After a full trial, the court convicted him of murder. The authority said he received a 20-year prison sentence.
Although the murder case reached its conclusion, the uninvited cat became the day’s main story, having forced court officials, security personnel, and onlookers to deal with one of the strangest interruptions seen in a Zimbabwean courtroom in years.
