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Extradited British millionaire businessman, Shrien Dewani is due in court on Monday on charges of ordering his wife's murder during their 2010 honeymoon in Cape Town.
After losing a three-year extradition fight in Britain, 34-year old Dewani was remanded in custody at a psychiatric hospital when he arrived in South Africa last month.
He will appear in the Western Cape high court for a pretrial hearing, at which the judge will assess the readiness of the prosecution and defence teams to start the trial.
Dewani, who returned to Britain shortly after his wife's murder, had fought his extradition, claiming he had mental health problems, including depression and post-traumatic stress.
He has been undergoing tests at the Valkenberg hospital in Cape Town to see if he is fit to stand trial.
If he is not found fit to face court within 18 months, he will be returned to Britain under the terms of his extradition.
On his arrival in South Africa, Dewani was formally charged by the Hawks with murder, conspiracy to commit murder and defeating the ends of justice.
Meanwhile, the cross-examination of ballistics expert Thomas Wolmarans is due to continue in Oscar Pistorius's murder trial in the High Court in Pretoria on Monday.
Questioned by prosecutor Gerry Nel on Friday, Wolmarans highlighted differences between his conclusions and the State's.
Wolmarans was initially called to testify in defence of the paralympian, who is charged with murdering his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp on Valentine's Day last year.
On Friday, Wolmarans sought to dispute the evidence of police ballistics expert and State witness Captain Chris Mangena.
Mangena testified earlier in the trial that Steenkamp was shot in the hip as she stood behind the door, then the arm and head after she fell into a half-seated position onto the magazine rack in the toilet.
Wolmarans said he did not believe Steenkamp was covering her head with her left hand when she was shot in the head, as Mangena had submitted.