Johannesburg
A man, struggling to get away, is surrounded by South African police in the middle of a street as a large crowd looks on. The officers pull him over to a police van and handcuff his hands, over his head, to the back of the vehicle as he sits on the ground.
Soon, as some in the crowd scream, the van begins to
move. It slowly picks up speed. The helpless man in a red T-shirt is dragged
along the road.
Soon, two officers lift him up by the legs,
apparently to avoid dragging -- but the police van seems to speed up, and the
man's legs fall to the ground, He is dragged hundreds of feet.
Though injured, the man was never taken to a
hospital, police investigators say.He died a few hours after the incident. The
suspected cause of death: head wounds.
The video, captured by someone in the crowd in
Daveyton, near Johannesburg, has sparked fury over police brutality in the
country."We are shocked by this incident," said Moses Dlamini, a
spokesman for the Police Investigative Directorate, an independent government
agency that looks into possible crimes by police.
But such a scene may not be all that rare. The
directorate received more than 6,000 complaints accusing police of numerous
crimes, including murder and torture, during a one-year period from early 2011
to early 2012.The cases include 648 deaths.
The U.S. State Department's human rights report on
South Africa for 2011, the latest year available, said the country's
"principal human rights problems included police use of lethal and
excessive force, including torture, against suspects and detainees, which
resulted in deaths and injuries; vigilante and mob violence; and prison
overcrowding and abuse of prisoners, including beatings and rape by prison
guards."
But Dlamini was quick to emphasize that in the
nation of 50 million people, police who carry out crimes do not reflect the
police service as a whole. "There are many other officers who are
dedicated, who uphold the law and arrest criminals all the time," he said.
While authorities have not confirmed the man's
identity, local reports say he was a taxi driver from Mozambique.The man and
the police in the video, as well as those in the crowd, are black, so there is
no suggestion that the incident is a sign of white vs. black tensions in the
country.
"This appalling incident involving excessive
force is the latest in an increasingly disturbing pattern of brutal police
conduct in South Africa," said Noel Kututwa, Amnesty International's
southern Africa director.Johan Burger, a senior researcher with the Institute
for Security Studies in Pretoria, said some police officers think they
"are above the law" and that there won't be consequences for their
actions.South Africa's history of violence "is part and parcel of daily
life," he said. Some think "the best way to deal with this is to act
in a brutal way."
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