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S’African state appeals freeing of anti-apartheid hero’s killer

By Editor
31 March 2016   |   2:27 am
South Africa’s Justice Minister, Michael Masutha, will appeal a court decision to free the killer of anti-apartheid leader, Chris Hani, his department said yesterday.
PHOTO: in.reuters.com

PHOTO: in.reuters.com

South Africa’s Justice Minister, Michael Masutha, will appeal a court decision to free the killer of anti-apartheid leader, Chris Hani, his department said yesterday.

Janusz Walus, a Polish immigrant, has served more than 20 years of a life sentence for the 1993 murder of Hani, who was a senior member of the now-ruling African National Congress (ANC) and head of the South African Communist Party, Reuters said.

Hani’s murder triggered nationwide riots, almost derailing South Africa’s 1994 transition to multi-racial democracy after decades of white apartheid rule.

“The minister believes that the honorable court erred in its judgment and is of the view that there are prospects of success on appeal,” the justice ministry said yesterday.

Clive Derby-Lewis, a right-wing politician who provided the murder weapon used by Walus, was freed on medical parole last year. Both men were originally sentenced to death but that was reduced to life in prison after South Africa abolished the death penalty in 1995.

Hani’s wife, Limpho, has criticised the decision to free Walus as “very sad for South Africa”.

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