South Africa: Remains of 83 political prisoners hanged during apartheid to be exhumed
Thu Mar 24, 2016 02:25:pm Africa
3.2K By sosa hills
South Africa on Wednesday commenced the exhumation of 83 political prisoners hanged at Pretoria Central Prison during the apartheid era, Justice Minister, Michael Masutha, said.
The minister said the remains would be identified and returned to their families.
The remains of 47 of them mainly members of the Pan Africanist Congress and United Democratic Front anti-apartheid organisations had been exhumed, while 83 of them remain buried in unmarked graves.
The apartheid government was widely criticised for its mass executions of anti-apartheid activists, most of them black South Africans.
It said that the last execution carried out at the prison was of Solomon Ngobeni in November 1989, who was convicted of robbing a taxi driver.
he last woman executed was Sandra Smith, also convicted for murder in June of the same year.
In February 1990, President Frederik Willem de Klerk declared a moratorium on executions in the country, while the death penalty was abolished in 1995.
However, many South Africans have called for the death penalty to be reinstated after a surge in violent crimes and murders in the country.
A survey conducted in 2015 by the South African research group Pondering Panda found that over three-quarters of young South Africans want the death penalty back.
(dpa/NAN)
The minister said the remains would be identified and returned to their families.
The remains of 47 of them mainly members of the Pan Africanist Congress and United Democratic Front anti-apartheid organisations had been exhumed, while 83 of them remain buried in unmarked graves.
The apartheid government was widely criticised for its mass executions of anti-apartheid activists, most of them black South Africans.
It said that the last execution carried out at the prison was of Solomon Ngobeni in November 1989, who was convicted of robbing a taxi driver.
he last woman executed was Sandra Smith, also convicted for murder in June of the same year.
In February 1990, President Frederik Willem de Klerk declared a moratorium on executions in the country, while the death penalty was abolished in 1995.
However, many South Africans have called for the death penalty to be reinstated after a surge in violent crimes and murders in the country.
A survey conducted in 2015 by the South African research group Pondering Panda found that over three-quarters of young South Africans want the death penalty back.
(dpa/NAN)
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