Breaking : Oscar Pistorius's release from prison halted by South Africa's justice minister

Posted by admin | 9 years ago | 3,102 times



Oscar Pistorius’s release from prison has been put on hold by the South African government.

The Paralympian, convicted of culpable homicide for the killing of his girlfriend, Reeva Steenkamp, was due to be moved to house arrest on Friday after serving 10 months behind bars.

But Michael Masutha, the justice minister, has referred the matter back to the parole review board, sowing legal confusion and doubts over the release date.

Mthunzi Mhaga, spokesman for the Justice Department, said the date would have to be reviewed again because the athlete was approved to be moved to house arrest too soon.

  

 

  

Pistorius should have served 10 months, or one sixth, of his five-year sentence before being considered for release, Mhaga said. But he was approved for parole in June, eight months into his sentence.

It is unclear when the parole board will meet to consider Pistorius for release.

Ian Levitt, a lawyer who attended the trial, praised the minister’s intervention. “The minister was acting prudently, acting responsibly,” he told the eNews Channel Africa. “He did exactly what he is entitled to do. The ultimate decision rests with the minister.”

Masutha received a petition on Monday from the Progressive Women’s Movement of South Africa expressing opposition to the release of Pistorius during the country’s Women’s Month.

A statement from the Department of Justice and Correctional Services cited a law stating that a person sentenced to imprisonment must serve at least one sixth of his or her sentence before being considered for “correctional supervision”, a form of house arrest.

It said: “The decision to release him on 21 August 2015 was made prematurely on 5 June 2015 when the offender was not eligible to be considered at all ... One sixth of a five-years’ sentence is 10 months and at the time the decision was made Mr Pistorius had served only over six months of his sentence.”

The Women’s League of the governing African National Congress welcomed the ruling. It said: “The ANC Women’s League remains convinced that judge [Thokozile] Masipa handed down an erroneous judgment and an extremely lenient sentence to Pistorius … setting a bad precedent in cases involving gender-based violence, especially in instances where women die at the hands of their partners.

“It is our wish that Pistorius remains in custody until November when the supreme court of appeal will hear the appeal brought by the NPA [National Prosecuting Authority] against the judgment and the sentence.”

Steenkamp’s parents, Barry and June, marked what would have been their daughter’s birthdayon Wednesday by visiting a beach in Port Elizabeth where she used to walk. They said in a statement this week: “We are still struggling with coming to terms with losing our precious daughter Reeva and her loss is felt even more this week as we would have celebrated her 32nd birthday on 19 August.

“As a family we want to continue to honour Reeva’s memory by focusing on the Reeva Rebecca Steenkamp Foundation, celebrating her life, what she stood for and the joy she brought into so many lives.”

Earlier this year, in a submission to the parole board that considered Pistorius’s release, the family made their feelings clear: “Statistics show that our society is under continuous attack from criminals and murderers. Incarceration of 10 months for taking a life is simply not enough. We fear that this will not send out the proper message and serve as the deterrent it should.

 


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