The Citizen (Gauteng)

Cyril is Marikana’s ‘accused number one’

ADVOCATE MPOFU: INTERVENTI­ONS WERE DRIVEN BY ULTERIOR MOTIVES

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Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa should face primary criminal liability for his role in the August 2012 Marikana shooting, the Marikana Commission of Inquiry heard yesterday.

“We say Mr Ramaphosa should be accused number one in the murder case. The LRC (Legal Resources Centre) has two lists of accused persons – one for accused in the police and another from Lonmin,” said Dali Mpofu, for the wounded and arrested Marikana miners.

The list of people who should face charges from the police department was topped by then police minister Nathi Mthetwa. The Lonmin list had former Lonmin head of human resources Barnard Mokwena on top.

Mpofu said the lists should be altered.

“If you are not going to charge Mr Ramaphosa, don’t charge anybody. You cannot have a situation where the source of the political pressure, the person who ignited the whole chain which resulted in the massacre [is not being charged],” said Mpofu.

“He must be the first accused on both lists.

“This is not some innocent nonexecuti­ve director of Lonmin, as he tried to make us believe. He was in the board meeting of July 25 where a decision was taken that the strikers must not be engaged [by Lonmin],” said Mpofu.

“Chairman, nobody is asking you to convict the person. My submission is the chairperso­n is quite empowered to recommend a prosecutio­n. All we are saying is there is reasonable suspicion of a crime being committed here.”

All we are saying, there is reasonable suspicion of a crime being committed here

The commission should swim against the perception of having “different rules for different folks”. Ramaphosa, Mpofu said, had caused several people to breach constituti­onal dictates.

“The constituti­on says very clearly the police must not be involved in making political considerat­ions. One of the people who wrote that constituti­on caused that to happen. He caused the police minister, police commission­er and everyone to cross the lines that are set by our constituti­on.”

Mpofu submitted to the inquiry that Ramaphosa’s interventi­ons during the unprotecte­d strike were driven by ulterior motives.

He said Ramaphosa pressurise­d the former police minister to act against the protesting miners.

Lonmin senior security guards Frans Mabelani and Hassan Fundi were killed during a confrontat­ion with the strikers on August 12, 2012.

In that week, eight other people – two policemen and mineworker­s – were also killed.

Mpofu said the interventi­ons by Ramaphosa and Lonmin were not inspired by the 10 deaths.

“With the greatest respect, I think 10 to 15 people die in Soweto alone every weekend and we have never seen all these people running around bringing thousands of the STF [police special task force]. It’s a lie that they were moved by that,” said Mpofu.

“I am not saying they were so inhuman to be unmoved but the hive of activity we saw [after August 12, 2012] was not driven by that.”

Ramaphosa was questioned at the inquiry in August regarding his interventi­ons at Marikana.

He said when he called minister Nathi Mthethwa on August 12 he did not prescribe how police should intervene in the violent strike.

The commission, chaired by retired Judge Ian Farlam, is investigat­ing the deaths of 44 people during the strike-related unrest at Lonmin’s platinum mine in Marikana in August 2012.

Thirty-four people, mostly striking mineworker­s, were shot dead in a clash with police on August 16. – Sapa

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 ?? Pictures: Gallo and Sapa ??
Pictures: Gallo and Sapa

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