Prosecutor accuses Pistorius of lying

Semiu Salami
Semiu Salami

Oscar Pistorius has faced a second day of intense cross-examination at his trial in which he was accused of being selfish, reckless and a liar.

Chief prosecutor Gerrie Nel focused on the athlete’s character, enthusiasm for firearms and version of events before he shot his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp.

The South African sprinter appeared calmer than he had during his previous three days on the witness stand.

The 27-year-old Olympic and Paralympic star denies murder.

He again insisted in court in Pretoria on Thursday that the shooting on Valentine’s Day last year was a terrible accident after he mistook her for a burglar.
Oscar Pistorius was asked about angry text messages exchanged with Reeva Steenkamp, Andrew Harding reports

Pistorius said he had not intended to pull the trigger, even to fire at an intruder, and could not explain why he fired four shots through a toilet cubicle door.

“I didn’t have time to think about it,” he said in a trembling voice.

Nel, known as the “bull terrier” in South Africa for his fierce questioning, also suggested Mr Pistorius was only concerned about himself during the couple’s three-month relationship.

“It was all about you, Pistorius,” he said, repeatedly.

He tried to give the impression that the Paralympic athlete was self-centred, contemptuous of his girlfriend and lacking responsibility, the BBC’s Karin Giannone reports from Pretoria.

Nel suggested that Pistorius should have apologised to Steenkamp’s family in private, rather than making a “spectacle” by doing it in court on Monday.

The athlete replied that he had not had the opportunity and had been unable to find the correct words. “I’m terribly sorry that I took the life of their daughter,” he said.

In an interview with the UK’s Daily Mirror newspaper, her mother, June, said the apology “left me unmoved. I knew it was coming”.

In court, Steenkamp shook her head as Pistorius was taken through several Whatsapp messages which Steenkamp had sent to the athlete.

In one, she wrote: “You have picked on me incessantly since we got back from Cape Town.”

Asked to comment, Pistorius said: “I don’t feel like I picked on her incessantly – maybe we were having a rough time in our relationship.”

Later, Nel set out what the state believes happened in the early hours of 14 February 2013 in Pistorius’ Pretoria home.

He said they would show that the two had an argument in the bedroom, and Ms Steenkamp ran screaming into the toilet.

The chief prosecutor showed a police photograph of the bedroom, taken three hours after the shooting, which he said contradicted Mr Pistorius’ account of where various items – including electric cooling fans and a duvet – had been placed at the time of the shooting.

“Your version is a lie,” Nel said – something the defendant denied.

In earlier cross-examination, Pistorius also denied ever shouting or screaming at Steenkamp, or a previous girlfriend, Sam Taylor, as she had testified earlier in the trial.

Referring to an incident when a gun was fired in a restaurant, he said he had not been aware the gun was loaded but insisted he had not pulled the trigger.

Nel said a gun firing itself would be a “miracle”, and accused Mr Pistorius of lying and not taking responsibility for his actions.

Pistorius did admit keeping ammunition in his bedside table, rather than in a safe, saying he was usually armed for his own safety.

The double amputee faces life imprisonment if convicted of murdering the 29-year-old model, reality TV celebrity and law graduate.

If he is acquitted of murder, South African law stipulates that the court must consider the separate, lesser charge of culpable homicide, or manslaughter, for which he could receive between six and 15 years in prison.

Pistorius also faces charges of illegally firing a gun in public and of illegally possessing ammunition, both of which he denies.

There are no juries at trials in South Africa, and his fate will ultimately be decided by the judge, assisted by two assessors.

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