A
video of South African police dragging a man for hundreds of metres from the
back of a pick-up truck drew a storm of protest on Thursday against a force
accused of routine brutality against citizens.
The man, a 27-year-old Mozambican taxi driver who had resisted
arrest, died in detention of head injuries and internal bleeding, according to
an initial post mortem report.
The incident was videotaped on Tuesday and was broadcast
nationwide on Thursday. It soon dominated the agenda on talk shows and in
social media.
"How much longer must South Africans live in fear of the very people who are supposed to protect them?" the opposition Democratic Alliance said in a statement.
"Are policemen/women generally programmed to be heartless,
brutal machines?" asked citizen Patience Salane on Twitter.
Police commissioner Riah Phiyega said she was looking at the
matter "in a very serious light and it is strongly condemned".
Police told media they detained the taxi driver after he parked
illegally, creating a traffic jam, and then resisted arrest.
The video shows the man scuffling with police, who subdue him.
He is then bound to the back of the pick-up by his arms before the vehicle
drives off in front of scores of witnesses in the east Johannesburg area of
Daveyton.
"The video presents a version which is different from the
officers and we will have to verify it," said Moses Dlamini, the spokesman
for the government's agency that investigates suspected police brutality.
Nearly 1,000 people die each year in South Africa in police
custody, according to the country's police watchdog.
Successive cases of violent and unprofessional behaviour by
police in recent years have drawn indignation from the public.
Police shot dead 34 striking workers at a platinum mine in
August last year - the deadliest security incident since apartheid ended in
1994. Post mortem reports said more than a dozen of the victims were shot in
the back and separate evidence suggested police had planted weapons on dead
victims.
With South Africa the focus of global attention last week when
track star Oscar Pistorius was accused of murdering his girlfriend, the lead
detective was removed from the investigation when it emerged he was facing
seven attempted murder charges for opening fire on a minibus full of
passengers.
Eight police officers involved in this has been discharged.
Eight police officers involved in this has been discharged.
Reuters
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