The Citizen (Gauteng)

EFF activist pleads guilty to charges

#FEESMUSTFA­LL PROTESTS: KHANYILE CENTRAL FIGURE

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Arrested in 2016 during running battles between police and students.

Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) student activist Bonginkosi Khanyile pleaded guilty in the Durban Magistrate’s Court yesterday to four out of 13 criminal charges related to the violent 2016 #FeesMustFa­ll protests in KwaZulu-Natal.

Khanyile’s advocate, Danie Combrink, read his client’s admission to magistrate Siphiwe Hlophe and a full court, where many onlookers were clad in EFF regalia.

The guilty pleas related to public violence, possession of a dangerous weapon and two counts of failure to comply with police orders.

In the admission, Khanyile admitted to unlawful assembly and using a slingshot to catapult stones at members of the South African Police Service.

“My aforesaid actions caused the public peace to be disturbed and I was aware that such a result would follow my actions,” he said.

He also pleaded guilty to failure to comply with police orders to disperse and desist from acts of violence on two separate occasions during the protests.

“At all times I was aware that my aforesaid actions were unlawful and punishable by law,” he said in his admission.

Khanyile was arrested in September 2016 during running battles between police and Durban University of Technology students that took place during the height of the protests.

He was charged with incitement to commit public violence, illegal gathering, possession of a dangerous weapon (a slingshot), obstructin­g traffic, causing a nuisance on public roads and possession of explosives.

The state did not lead evidence on the other counts, meaning Khanyile was acquitted of those.

Hlophe recounted how Khanyile was captured on video throwing stones at police by a public order policing videograph­er. The state and defence both closed their cases and magistrate Hlophe set down October 16 for sentencing.

Reports from Khanyile’s probation and correction­al officers were still awaited, said Hlophe. The reports would be used as considerat­ion in sentencing.

Khanyile made national headlines when his bail applicatio­n made it all the way to the Constituti­onal Court, after being denied at the lower courts.

After close on six months in prison, the Constituti­onal Court granted him bail of R250. – ANA

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