Imminently, the judge will deliver a
verdict in the trial of Oscar Pistorius, the Paraolympian who shot his
girlfriend, Reeva Steenkamp, dead at his home in Pretoria, South Africa,
on Valentine’s Day in 2012.
Oscar Pistorius came into global limelight as a double leg amputee
“Bladerunner” using carbon-fiber prosthetics. Pistorius set records – in
2011the first double leg amputee to win an able-bodied world track
medal; in 2012 the irst double leg amputee to participate in the
Olympics; first double leg amputee to win gold medals; world record in
200 metres race and silver in the final. He became rich and famous. He
was entitled to and desired by models such as Steenkamp who said
severally that she felt lucky to have Pistorius as “my boo”.
The year 2012 that marked Pistorius rise to glory was the year of his infamous descent. He was just 26 years old.
The many questions of what happened and how were answered in the
court during a live broadcast trial which lasted almost one year from
Pistorius first court appearance on August 19 2012. At the end, South
Africa remained divided as it was at the beginningof the trial.
For one goup, Pistorius is a violent, angry, troubled,dangerous,
armed, man with a difficult past who is unable to cope with fame and is
disrespectful of women. To the other group, he is an unfortunate victim
of nature, disadvantaged, sensitive, scared person who is forced by
South Africa’s crime-ridden society to seek heightened security for
personal protection.
If you accept the view of the first group, Judge Masipa’s verdict is
clear - the prosecutor’s charge of premeditated murder stands and
Pistorius deserves a life sentence which is 25 years imprisonment.
Mitigation may come through pleading of extraordinary circumstance such
as first offender, disability of Pistorius, value to society.
If you accept the second view, then Pistorius could be guilty of
culpable homicide even if he mistakenly fired at the closed door of his
bathroom thinking that there was an intruder. It will be difficult to
prove that, as a trained owner of many guns and when to use them, he had
exercised due caution.
Guns and violence are at the core of the unfortunate incident. The
verdict will not bring back dead Steenkamp whose family doted on so
much. Neither will any judgment revive the descending stardom of
Pistorius. There will be losers and losers only.
During a first visit to South Africa in 1993 this writer saw a sign
at a domestic airport stating “Firearms check off”. A South African
gentleman explained to the ignorant visitor that before one boarded an
aircraft one’s firearms should be deposited and then collected at the
landing airport. The ignorant visitor wondered silently why would anyone
carry firearms on an airplane, except for security personnel.
In later years, after living in the country for a while, many things
became clearer. In 2001, at one of the usual casual exchanges during a
transaction, an officer at a bank in Pretoria explained that she had
noticed some movement around her compound the previous afternoon. “I
thought that some bastards were trying to come in. I quickly brought out
my rifle and stood by the window. There was no further movement. I was
ready to blow out any bastard’s brains,” she explained.
In 2002, a young, brilliant computer specialist who was a colleague’s
brother, was out strolling with friends in his township of
Atteridgeville, near Pretoria, on an afternoon. They were accosted by
some boys who demanded their cell phones. The friends handed over theirs
but the computer specialist chose to plead with them saying that his
phone was rather precious. In a twinkle of an eye a gun was pointed at
him and two bullets went into his head. He died before he could reach
the hospital.
A neighbor in Pretoria lived with his wife and little daughter in
2002. He was a fairly well to do person living in a comfortable home and
having a good life from all indications. The only noticeable thing was
that he looked moody from time to time. But who does not have moods
anyway. Suddenly one day the wife came over to announce that her husband
had shot himself dead with one of his numerous guns.
In 2010, a young lady clerk in an international organization in
Johannesburg sought counseling to help her cope with trauma of divorce
that she was going through. In her explanation of the urgency of the
service, she explained: “Two days ago I got so angry that I decided that
it was best to kill my husband. I went into a fuel station and asked an
attendant to get me a gun. I paid 250 Rands (about 25 US dollars in
today’s exchange rate) and collected a pistol the second day. The
attendant showed me how to use it. But when I told my sister my plan,
she talked me out of it and took the gun away from me.”
By all indications, South Africa is not one of the leading countries
in gun ownership and deaths from guns. Data from Gun Policy Organisation
in South Africa shows that South Africa ranks 17 out of 178 countries
in privately owned gun. In rate of privately owned firearms per 100
population, out of 178 countries, South Africa ranks 50. In comparison,
USA has less than 5% of the world's population, but leads with 35–50 per
cent of the world's civilian-owned guns.
The estimated total number of guns (both licit and illicit) held by
civilians in South Africa is 3.4 million. Nigeria with a population of
about 150 million, which is three times that of South Africa, has 2
million guns held by civilians.
A report in TIME magazine in March 2013 says that 2,000 guns are
stolen from legal owners in South Africa every month. This in part
accounts for the cheap availability of firearms on the streets. 1
According to the United Nations Office of Drug and Crime (UNODC) the
worst firearm murder rates are Honduras, El Salvador and Jamaica.
• Puerto Rico tops the world's table for firearms murders as a
percentage of all homicides - 94.8%. It's followed by Sierra Leone in
Africa and Saint Kitts and Nevis in the Caribbean. South Africa is
number 17 whilst USA is number 4. In total gun homicides, Brazil comes
first, followed by Colombia, Mexico, Venezuela, USA and then South
Africa.
South Africa’s stringent firearms control and regulation policy is
respected and acknowledged as being fairly effective by gun advocates
and critics.
A combination of the apartheid (separation) policy and its attendant
exclusion, deep distrust among racial groups, wide economic inequality,
and historical, continuing violence can account for easy uses of guns.
Pistorius despite living a gated community with electric fenced walls
and security guards did not feel safe. He slept with his pistol under
his bed and a rifle at his window and in 2013 he applied for licenses
for six more guns.
There are no simple answers to the myriad of issues that confront the
new South Africa. Distrust of system and resort to violence to resolve
problems is a common characteristic. It is seen in the reaction of the
lady banker who picked up her gun at the slightest movement of flowers
in her garden because she felt vulnerable. The potential divorcee who
wanted to settle scores with her husband with bullets rather than
through the law court, and the young IT specialist who was shot for his
cell phone are agent and victim respectively of violence.
The unflappable Judge Thokozile Matilda Masipa, a former journalist,
had two court assessors to advise her through the proceedings. Now South
Africa waits in dead silence for Masipa’s verdict. Beyond the judgment,
the country will have to grapple with defining its identity within a
rainbow of tough historical legacy and socio-economic challenges.
• Bunmi Makinwa is a communication for leadership entrepreneur based in South Africa and Nigeria. He was Africa Regional Director of United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA).

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