Pretoria - Paralympian Oscar Pistorius started
crying shortly after entering the Pretoria Magistrate's Court for his
appearance on a charge of killing his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp.
Wearing a dark suit, he put his hands to his mouth and started crying after Magistrate Desmond Nair greeted him.
Top prosecutor Gerrie Nel stood nearby.
Nair told him to be calm, and Pistorius sat down.
His lawyer began proceedings with a discussion on the media coverage in the court.
Pistorius was arrested on Thursday after
Steenkamp was shot dead in his home, at the Silver Woods Country Estate
in Pretoria, on Valentine's Day.
The court session had been expected to start at
10am. He was expected to apply for bail. The State said on Thursday it
would oppose this.
Officials had rescheduled cases which had
already been set down. Pistorius' sister Aimee and his father Henke were
in the packed court.
Red and white police tape was used to mark the line which photographers and cameramen could not cross.
Earlier court officials asked “non-essential”
people to leave, but nobody budged. Socialite and businessman Kenny
Kunene was among them.
A media list was held at the door to control access for the queue of journalists.
Pistorius spent most of Thursday being
questioned by police about the Valentine's Day shooting of Steenkamp, a
model and law graduate, and undergoing routine medical tests.
At first it was reported there had been an
accidental shooting, he having mistaken Steenkamp, his girlfriend, for a
robber at his home in the early hours of Thursday morning.
Police later distanced themselves from that information.
Crowds gathered outside the court, with street
vendors racing in with stock such as a trolley load of mielies, to take
advantage of the extra business.
Pistorius shot to fame in 2008 when he won a
case at the Court of Arbitration for Sport, which cleared him to run
against able-bodied athletes.
Dubbed “Blade Runner” because of the futuristic
carbon-fibre legs he used to compete in races, he made history when he
became the first amputee to win a silver medal at the World Athletics
Championships in 2011.
He also became the first amputee to compete on
the track at the able-bodied Olympic Games in August 2012, reaching the
semifinals in the individual 400m event, and competing in the relay
final, with South Africa given a free pass after they were obstructed by
the Kenyan team in the heats.
At the Paralympic Games in London in September
2012 he accused Alan Oliveira of having an unfair advantage with longer
running blades, when the Brazilian athlete beat him into second place in
the T44 200m. Pistorius later apologised to Oliveira.
In a previous brush with the law in 2009,
Pretoria Police said they had decided to not go ahead with an assault
charge against him. A woman had been asked to leave his house after
kicking the doors, and a door had closed on her leg. He spent a night in
jail in connection with this, but police decided they did not have
enough evidence to go ahead with the case.
Also in 2009 police were probing a case of
reckless driving against him following a boating accident on the Vaal
River. The National Prosecuting Authority decided there was not enough
evidence. - Sapa
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