A South African minister who once told police to shoot criminals dead without warning was on Tuesday accused of involvement in the deaths of 34 striking miners at Marikana. The survivors' lawyer, Dali Mpofu, said former mines minister Susan Shabangu had labelled the violent labour dispute a criminal act, paving the way for heavy-handed police action, an accusation she denied.
The 34 strikers were gunned down by police at the Lonmin platinum mine north of Johannesburg during a work stoppage on August 2012. Years earlier, in 2008, Shabangu, then a deputy minister of safety and security, told the police to kill criminals. "You must kill the bastards if they threaten you or the community, you have one shot and it must be a kill-shot," Shabangu said at the time.
At the hearing Mpofu claimed that by describing action by striking workers at Marikana as "acts of criminality", the police would know how they were expected to respond. "You knew that the re-characterisation of what was going on at Lonmin, of those people to criminals, would bring them within the ambit of your statement, namely that they must be killed," said Mpofu. "You knew what the characterisation would do, it was going to militarise the situation and bring about state-sponsored violence," Mpofu argued at an inquiry into the killings.
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