2011-06-12
A photograph of Farai, which his brother Clemence says was taken just weeks before he was killed.
The full footage, obtained by City Press from a freelance journalist, has never been released in South Africa, but made headlines in one of the world’s most influential newspapers.
http://video.nytimes.com/video/2011/06/02/magazine/100000000845074/life-and-death-in-diepsloot.html
Kujirichita was still alive when a man in a white cap methodically destroyed his face and skull with a heavy wooden plank.
He was probably dead or dying when another man grasped his belt and punched him repeatedly in the groin and a grinning teenage girl raised a large chunk of cement above her head.
Kujirichita's "crime" was that he was a Zimbabwean in the wrong place at the wrong time.
His murder in January this year in Diepsloot - a community of 150 000 in northern Johannesburg, where instances of mob violence are commonplace and growing ever more so - was quickly forgotten.
The open space between two squatter camps where Farai Kujirichita was beaten to death by vigilantes.
Xenophobic attacks
It would have remained that way but for a New York Times Magazine cover story last weekend and the grainy cellphone video of his final moments, excerpts from which were published for the first time on the paper's website.
The article appeared just days after UN special rapporteur on the human rights of migrants, Jorge Bustamante, highlighted xenophobic attacks in South Africa and called on the government to implement more stringent hate crime legislation.
The story of Kujirichita's killing made international headlines last week, including in newspapers in Zimbabwe, Taiwan and New Zealand.
In Diepsloot, the killings continued.
Two weeks ago, two Zimbabweans were kicked and beaten to death after being accused of robbery.
In another incident, a suspected thief narrowly escaped with his life when police arrived just in time to prevent a mob from killing him, an incident witnessed by a City Press reporter.
"The police should have given him to us. We know what to do with people like him. We will continue to kill tsotsis," resident Johannah Mofokeng said as police drove away.
'Foreigners'
"We get called out all the time," Diepsloot police station spokesperson Daniel Mavimbela said.
"People here take the law into their own hands."
All too often "foreigners" are the targets of their rage.
The wife of one of the five people arrested for the double killings, Tswanelo Ndlovu, says Zimbabweans are to blame for crime in Diepsloot. She offers no evidence to support her claim.
"Some of these people don't even live here. They come at night to rob us and terrorise our neighbours, and we will not stand for that," she said.
Asked how she could know beyond doubt that someone accused of a crime was guilty, she said: "I trust what my neighbour tells me and what other people I know say."
Witness
Freelance journalist Golden Mtika witnessed Kujirichita's murder and, at great risk to himself, captured the mob frenzy on a cellphone camera.
"I have witnessed more than 300 mob justice cases, but that one is the scariest. I still can't believe that I shot that video," said Mtika.
Even children have become desensitised to the violence around them, Mtika said.
"They could be playing soccer on a field and there would be a dead body next to them and they wouldn’t be bothered."
Residents "don’t ask questions" when someone is accused of a crime.
"Mob justice is the people's way of dealing with criminals because they don't feel protected by the police. It is so common that people get necklaced almost every week."
Haunted
Mtika is haunted by the images of Kujirichita being kicked in the face and sjambokked, his features eventually reduced to a bloody, unrecognisable pulp. "It's hard for me to look at the video," he says.
The attack took place on January 22.
Led by a 15-year-old boy, a mob of residents searching for "criminals" had begun torching shacks and a caravan, and soon encountered Kujirichita talking on his phone.
"He told them he was South African but they snatched his phone away from him, looked at the numbers on the phone and realised that he was actually from Zimbabwe.
"So they started beating him for telling a lie."
The mob tried to force him to throw himself in a fire.
Teens
"He couldn't do that so he tried to run away but they caught him and started beating him like a dog.
It was a shame watching him die like that,” said Mtika.
A 15-year-old boy and a 17-year-old girl are the only suspects facing trial for Kujirichita’s murder.
They will appear in the Atteridgeville Regional Court tomorrow.
The three main assailants seen in the video were never arrested.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/05/magazine/watching-the-murder-of-an-innocent-man.html?_r=3&ref=magazine
Asked how she could know beyond doubt that someone accused of a crime was guilty, she said: "I trust what my neighbour tells me and what other people I know say."
ReplyDeleteStupid, Ignorant and Arrogant.
How can a person be so stupid- killing someone because of some misinformed perseptions.
I used to think South Africans are smart people but now i have concluded that the Black South Africans Are the most stupid Black people in the whole world.
No Wonder why The Nigerians are always using them to do their dirty work for peanuts whilst the nigerians relaxes in their expensive appartments.
And at the end of the day they will be hearding back to Alexandra and Diepsloot.