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Lawyers Demand Release Of South African Miners Charged In Colleagues' Deaths

Lawyers for 270 miners in South Africa are threatening legal action if their clients are not released from prison today. The mine workers were charged with murdering their own colleagues after police opened fire on a crowd of about 3,000 striking workers two weeks ago, killing 34 people.

NPR's Ofeibea Quist-Arcton tells us the government charged the miners with murder using an obscure legal doctrine employed by the apartheid government.

South Africa's national prosecuting authority defends its decision to invoke the "common purpose" law, as it's called, which stipulates that when a crime is committed, members of a crowd can be prosecuted as accomplices. Prosecutors argue that the striking workers collectively confronted the police during the deadly clashes at the Marikana Platinum mine, northwest of Johannesburg.

It is unclear if using the "common purpose" law is simply a way to keep the miners in prison, or if prosecutors are intent on pursuing murder charges in court. Invoking the apartheid-era law against the minors appears to shift blame for the killings away from the police and onto the striking workers.

According to CNN, South African Justice Minister Jeff Radebe says the prosecutor's decision to charge the miners has "induced a sense of shock, panic and confusion." Radebe says he intends to seek clarity on the reasons behind using the "common purpose" law against the miners.

The National Prosecuting Authority has made no response to Radebe's statements.

Either way, the killings at the mine and the government's decision to charge the miners for the murder are sparking outrage in South Africa, where there is growing awareness of income inequality, poverty and unemployment.

Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Shula Neuman is the executive editor at St. Louis Public Radio. She came the station in late 2013 as a subject matter editor, after having worked as an editor for NPR in Washington, D.C. Shula started her journalism career as a general assignment reporter for the Watertown Daily Times and made the switch to radio when she took a job as a reporter/evening newscaster at St. Louis Public Radio. After that, Shula reported on economic development for Cleveland’s public radio station. This is Shula’s second stint with St. Louis Public Radio. She says she just can’t stay away from her hometown because she’s tired of rooting for the Cardinals in absentia. Shula has a master’s degree in journalism from Columbia University; an Executive M.B.A. from Washington University in St. Louis; and a bachelor’s from Reed College in Portland, OR. She claims she has no intention of going back to school again.
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