Austin American-Statesman

South Africa court: Activist murdered

Ruling raises hopes that similar cases will be investigat­ed.

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An anti-apartheid activist who died in 1971 was tortured and killed by South African police, a court said Thursday, a landmark decision that raised hopes that dozens of similar cases would be investigat­ed.

The inquest into Ahmed Timol’s death had riveted South Africans as legal experts said it could set a precedent for examining similar deaths.

“It is sad that it took so long,” Nobel Peace Prize winner and former archbishop Desmond Tutu said in a statement read out by Timol’s family, local media reported.

The court found that Timol did not kill himself by jumping from a 10th-floor window, as authoritie­s said at the time.

An inquest found that the South African Communist Party member was murdered after his arrest and transfer to a Johannesbu­rg police station where opponents of white minority rule were often held without trial and tortured.

Judge Billy Mothle said evidence suggests Timol was pushed out of the window. Two former police officers should be investigat­ed, one for allegedly misleading the court and another for alleged perjury, the judge said.

Timol was one of 73 political detainees who died in police custody in South Africa between 1963 and 1990. The system of white-minority rule ended in the early 1990s.

Timol’s family had pushed South Africa’s government to open a new criminal investigat­ion into his death as the country still struggles to find justice for the atrocities of a not-so-distant past. Forensic pathologis­ts testified that Timol suffered serious injuries to his head and leg that were incompatib­le with his fall, and that would have made it difficult for him to climb onto the window sill and jump.

Former security policeman Joao Rodrigues, who said he was in the room with Timol when he died, has stood by his story, saying the activist dove out of the window before Rodrigues could stop him.

 ?? AP ?? Imtiaz Cajee, nephew of Ahmed Timol, poses with his book, “Timol: A Quest for Justice,” in Pretoria, South Africa. A court has found that Timol did not kill himself by jumping from a 10th-floor window, as authoritie­s said in 1971.
AP Imtiaz Cajee, nephew of Ahmed Timol, poses with his book, “Timol: A Quest for Justice,” in Pretoria, South Africa. A court has found that Timol did not kill himself by jumping from a 10th-floor window, as authoritie­s said in 1971.

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