El exjefe de la NPA Shaun Abrahams niega injerencias en los procesos de la TRC

El exdirector de la Autoridad Nacional de Fiscalía, Shaun Abrahams, declaró ante la Comisión Khampepe que los procesamientos relacionados con la TRC comenzaron durante su mandato y negó cualquier interferencia política o fallo personal en la gestión de los casos de la era del apartheid.

El abogado Shaun Abrahams compareció ante la comisión el 14 de mayo de 2026. Rechazó las acusaciones de las familias de las víctimas de que había descuidado sus deberes o actuado únicamente bajo presión externa.

Abrahams afirmó que autorizó el enjuiciamiento de cuatro exoficiales de la rama de seguridad en el caso del asesinato de Nokuthula Simelane en marzo de 2016, tras una revisión de las pruebas y consultas con la familia. También presentó memorandos para reabrir las investigaciones sobre las muertes de Ahmed Timol y Neil Aggett.

El ex-NDPP, quien dirigió la autoridad desde junio de 2015 hasta agosto de 2018, argumentó que los retrasos se debieron a problemas institucionales persistentes, como la pérdida de registros y la falta de capacidad de investigación. Señaló el procesamiento previo de Eugene Terre'Blanche por los atentados en el Noroeste como prueba de su compromiso con los asuntos posteriores a la TRC.

Artículos relacionados

Brigadier Abraham Nkhwashu testifying at Madlanga Commission, denying interference in Swart murder investigation.
Imagen generada por IA

Sedibeng police commissioner denies interfering in Swart murder probe

Reportado por IA Imagen generada por IA

Brigadier Abraham Nkhwashu, Sedibeng District Commissioner, testified at the Madlanga Commission on April 22, 2026, denying allegations of aiding his brother-in-law Katiso “KT” Molefe in the investigation into engineer Armand Swart’s murder. Nkhwashu admitted visiting Molefe in prison but described it as a humanitarian act to deliver clothing. He apologised to Swart’s family and called for justice if Molefe is guilty.

Anton Ackermann, a former top prosecutor, testified at the Khampepe inquiry about how former president Thabo Mbeki's actions led to delays in Truth and Reconciliation Commission prosecutions. He described a systematic effort to protect apartheid-era perpetrators through policy changes and political interference. Ackermann highlighted the distinction between reconciliation and justice for victims.

Reportado por IA

Former acting National Director of Public Prosecutions Mokotedi Mpshe has denied receiving political instructions to remove prosecutor Anton Ackermann from Truth and Reconciliation Commission cases. Testifying at the Khampepe Commission on 7 April 2026, he described a rift over plans to arrest officials linked to the 1981 attempted poisoning of Frank Chikane. Mpshe noted that Ackermann was correct in hindsight, given the political context.

Former President Jacob Zuma has applied to the Constitutional Court for leave to appeal a Johannesburg High Court decision dismissing his bid to remove Justice Sisi Khampepe as chairperson of the TRC Cases Inquiry. The ruling, delivered this week, also rejected a similar application by former President Thabo Mbeki, who supported Zuma's claims of bias.

Reportado por IA

At the Madlanga Commission on 19 February 2026, suspended Deputy National Police Commissioner General Shadrack Sibiya faced intense cross-examination over the disbandment of the Political Killings Task Team (PKTT) and related corruption allegations. Commissioners and evidence leader Advocate Adila Hassim challenged Sibiya's explanations, highlighting contradictions in his testimony. Sibiya denied involvement in wrongdoing, attributing decisions to pressure from higher authorities.

Member of Parliament Fadiel Adams has accused KwaZulu-Natal Police Commissioner Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi of disregarding the law during testimony before a parliamentary committee. Adams claims Mkhwanazi wants him to cover up access to classified information. He also supported the disbandment of a task team investigating political killings.

Reportado por IA

South Africa's National Police Commissioner Fannie Masemola made his first court appearance in Pretoria on April 21, 2026, facing four charges of contravening the Public Finance Management Act. The charges relate to a R360-million police tender allegedly irregularly awarded to Vusimuzi 'Cat' Matlala's company. The case was postponed to May 13.

 

 

 

Este sitio web utiliza cookies

Utilizamos cookies para análisis con el fin de mejorar nuestro sitio. Lee nuestra política de privacidad para más información.
Rechazar