Justice, finally, might be served for the murder of Reeva Steenkamp after South Africa’s Constitutional Court rejected a last-ditch appeal by Oscar Pistorius over his conviction her murder.
The court said Pistorius’s appeal against his conviction had “no prospect of success” and declined to hear the case.
Pistorius, a Paralympic champion, shot dead his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp in 2013. He was released after serving less than a year of a lesser manslaughter charge in October, but that conviction was upgraded to one of murder after a successful appeal by the state to the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) in December.
The SCA agreed with the state that the trial judge had made a mistake when she ruled that Pistorius was not guilty of murder because he did not foresee that he could have killed Steenkamp by firing at the locked door with a high-calibre weapon.
Steenkamp’s family said at the time they welcomed that verdict “Now we’ve seen that the justice system works. It’s about respect for my daughter, how wonderful she was, how clever she was, all that was taken away from her,” Steenkamp’s mother, June, said.
Pistorius then launched a final attempt for freedom by appealing to the Constitutional Court, saying the SCA “discriminated” against him by failing to take into account his disability as a double amputee and an anxiety disorder he suffered from.