South African News

NPA to reinstate case against police officers acquitted in Marikana Massacre

Manyane Manyane|Published

The National Prosecuting Authority is set to reinstate charges against the police officers who were acquitted for the Marikana Massacre.

Image: Leon Sadiki / Independent Newspapers Archives

The National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) says the case against police officers who were acquitted in relation to the Marikana Massacre will be reinstated.

The NPA said the docket has been compiled for the process to resume.

This follows demands for accountability. 

The Socio-Economic Rights Institute of South Africa (Seri) said the NPA has failed to prosecute anyone for the deaths of mineworkers despite its assurance to hold those involved to account.

August 16, 2025, marked 13 years since the tragic Marikana Massacre, when police shot protesting mineworkers, killing 34 in 2012. The mineworkers from Lonmin Mine went on a strike for six weeks, challenging their working conditions and demanding a wage increase.

Seri said that without bringing prosecutions for the massacre, the state continues to fail the families of the deceased and the survivors. 

In 2015, the Farlam Commission of Inquiry recommended a criminal investigation into the police over the deaths of the miners. The report concluded that police had a defective plan to end the strike and were wrong to proceed with it.

Seri said that despite repeated assurances of its commitment to dealing with the criminal proceedings relating to the deaths at Marikana, the NPA has failed to prosecute anyone for the deaths of mineworkers that arose from the events of August 16, 2012.

However, the NPA disagreed with the statement, saying the police officers who were prosecuted were acquitted by the High Court. 

Seri said families were told that the NPA would consider an appeal, but they have heard nothing since.

The organisation stated that this inaction reflects a lack of commitment to ensuring that families obtain justice for their loved ones' deaths, adding that several family members have died before seeing any meaningful accountability.

NPA spokesperson in the North West, Sivenathi Gunya, said the case would resume, adding that the authority looked into all the dockets that were brought from head office to the North West division for a decision, following the acquittals of some police officials.

"The decision was made to conduct a formal inquest before proceeding to court, as the evidence in the dockets was based on similar facts. The team, headed by the Deputy Director of Public Prosecutions and two senior State advocates, made a decision to go for a formal inquest. The decision was communicated to the IPID for them to compile an inquest docket for the process to resume," he said.

Only nine officers have been prosecuted to date. 

In 2021, four officers, including former North West deputy police commissioner Major-General William Mpembe, were acquitted in the matter related to the death of Modisatsile van Wyk Sagalala, one of the mineworkers shot on August 16. Sagalala died while handcuffed at the back of a police truck. The High Court also acquitted six officers for their role, which resulted in the deaths of Semi Jokanisi, Thembelakhe Mati, and Pumzile Sekonyile.

"The two trials that concluded in 2021 and 2024 sat sporadically and were slow-moving. They have been the closest that the families have come to learning the true details about the deaths of their loved ones and obtaining some form of closure. Both failed prosecutions have shown the corrosive impact that the passage of time has had on the strength of the State’s cases, which means that further delays in prosecutions are to deny the families justice and an opportunity to see those implicated being held to account," said Seri executive director Nomzamo Zondo.

She added that the NPA issue in 2023, and detailed various personnel and resource constraints, as reasons for their failure to prosecute the deaths.

Zondo noted that two more years have passed, yet families and survivors have still not seen any progress regarding prosecutions.

Gunya said the issue has been resolved, and a team of senior State advocates led by the deputy director has been established to look into the docket.

Seri added that aside from justice for the families, prosecutions for the massacre are consistent with South Africa’s international obligations concerning victims of gross human rights violations, which the Marikana Massacre is emblematic of.

“The failure to hold accountable those responsible for these deaths is a betrayal of the promise of justice. Not only does it dishonour the families of the deceased, but erodes trust in our justice system."

Marikana has arguably been the most politicised incident of police brutality since 1994. It has left permanent scars on our democracy, said Zondo, adding that it is crucial that justice is administered equally and that the families and survivors of the massacre are given the opportunity to obtain closure.

manyane.manyane@inl.co.za