PRESS RELEASE 10 September 2025:
NPA TO REOPEN INQUEST INTO THE 1977 KILLING OF STEVE BIKO
The NPA will on Friday, 12 September 2025, enroll the reopening of the inquest into the death of anti-apartheid activist and Black Consciousness Movement (BCM) founder and leader, Stephen Bantu Biko, who died exactly 48 years from that date after being allegedly tortured by the then apartheid regime. The reopening of the inquest follows the Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development’s approval of the National Director of Public Prosecutions’ request, which was supported by the legal representatives of the Biko family.
Biko was arrested with his comrade, Peter Jones, at a roadblock near Grahamstown (Makhanda) on 18 August 1977. He violated his banning orders, which restricted his movement to King Williamstown (Qonce). He was taken to Walmer Police Station in Port Elizabeth (Gqeberha), where he was allegedly tortured while shackled with leg irons and kept naked in a cell. It was only after 24 days in custody that medical assistance was sought for him after “foam” was noted around his mouth. On 11 September 1977, he was loaded unconscious, still naked and shackled, into the back of a police Land Rover, and transported to a prison hospital in Pretoria, 1,200 kilometres away. He died outside a Pretoria hospital on 12 September 1977 at the age of 30. The cause of Biko’s death was recorded as extensive brain injury caused by centralisation of blood circulation and intravascular blood coagulation, acute kidney failure and uremia.
A formal inquest was held in November 1977. The version of his captors and interrogators of the notorious police Special Branch (SB) members at that inquest was that he had sustained his injuries when he banged his head against the wall. The presiding officer, Chief Magistrate MJ Prins, accepted the version of the SB members and found that Biko sustained the injuries during a scuffle with the SB members. The magistrate also exonerated the medical practitioners who treated Biko while in prison. On 02 February 1978, the then Attorney General of the Eastern Cape declined to prosecute anyone for the death of Biko. During the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) sitting in 1997, former senior SB officers from Gqeberha, Major Harold Snyman, Captain Daniel Petrus Siebert, Captain Jacobus Johannnes Oosthuysen Benecke, Warrant Officer Rubin Marx and Sergeant Gideon Johannes Nieuwoudt applied for amnesty in relation to the death of Biko.
Their version was that Biko had attacked one of their colleagues with a chair after he sat down without asking for permission. In the ensuing scuffle to restrain him, Biko hit his head against the wall, they claimed. They admitted that they colluded and fabricated their versions, submitting false affidavits during the initial investigation into Biko’s death. The TRC refused all five of them amnesty because their evidence was contradictory and disclosed no political motive. The main goal of reopening the inquest is to lay before the court evidence that will enable the court to make a finding in terms of section 16(2) (d) of the Inquests Act 58 of 1959, as to whether the death was brought about by any act, or omission, which prima facie involves or amounts, to an offence on the part of any person. The NPA and its partners will continue their efforts to address the atrocities of the past and assist in providing closure to the Biko family and society at large.
Issued by: Luxolo Tyali NPA Regional Spokesperson Eastern Cape Division Tel: 047 501 2630 Cell: 073 555 9292 Email: ltyali@npa.gov.za
PRESS RELEASE 08 September 2025 NPA TO OPEN INQUEST INTO THE 1993 KILLING OF FIVE CHILDREN BY SADF IN MTHATHA
The Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development has approved the National Director of Public Prosecutions’ request for the holding of a joint inquest into the deaths of five youngsters killed by the Apartheid regime’s South African Defence Force (SADF) during an attack at the home of a Pan Africanist Congress (PAC) member.
On 08 October 1993, Mzwandile Mfeya and Sandiso Yaso, both twelve years of age, sixteen-year-old twins Samora and Sadat Mpendulo, as well as seventeen-year-old Thando Mthembu, were brutally murdered in house number 47, AC Jordan Street, in the Northcrest suburb of Mthatha. The victims were students preparing for their final examinations. The house belonged to the father of the twins, Sigqibo Mpendulo, who was a PAC activist. The attackers are believed to have been targeting the erstwhile PAC military wing, Azanian People’s Liberation Army (APLA) cadres who were allegedly hiding an arms cache at the house. The door was kicked open, and the soldiers opened fire on the occupants of the house, killing all of them. On the same day, SADF issued a statement claiming responsibility for the attack. The raid occurred after some APLA members were arrested and tortured by the South African Police Security Branch, which ordered them to give information regarding APLA activities.
During the inquest, which will sit in the Mthatha High Court on a date still to be determined by the judge president, the State will provide evidence of numerous witnesses, including the relatives of the deceased. The main goal is to lay before the court evidence that will enable the court to make a finding in terms of section of the Inquest Act, whether the death of the deceased can be attributed to anyone to be subsequently held criminally liable. The NPA and its partners will continue their efforts to address the atrocities of the past and assist in providing closure to the families of the victims of these crimes and the society at large.
Issued by: Luxolo Tyali NPA Regional Spokesperson Eastern Cape Division Tel: 047 501 2630 Cell: 073 555 9292 Email: ltyali@npa.gov.za
