Shrien Dewani's trial started in the Cape Town High Court today after he was brought here in April following a lengthy extradition battle that saw him being sent for psychiatric treatment in the UK and South Africa.
Dewani, 34, confessed in a statement read out on his behalf by his lawyer Francois Van Zyl to having had sexual interactions with both men and women physically and through email chats, including with male prostitute Leopold Leisser, who will testify about this for the state.
"I consider myself to be bisexual," the court was told.
"My sexual interactions with males were mostly physical experiences or email chats with people I met online or in clubs, including prostitutes," Dewani's witness statement said, adding he started treatment for this after he met his wife-to-be.
Dewani also pleaded not guilty to Anni's murder as well as charges of conspiracy to kidnap, robbery with aggravating circumstances and obstructing the administration of justice.
Prosecutors argue that Dewani conspired with Cape Town residents Zola Tongo, Mziwamadoda Qwabe and Xolile Mngeni to kill his wife two weeks after their lavish wedding.
Taxi driver Tongo, Qwabe and Mngeni are already serving prison sentences in connection with the murder.
Driver Zola Tongo said in a plea bargain during his trial that Dewani had offered him R15 000 to have Anni killed.
Dewani claimed that he was thrown out of the vehicle, and that the last words he had spoken to Anni were in Gujarati, telling her to be quiet and to comply with the alleged hijackers' demands.
