Court hears Meyiwa would’ve survived ‘seconds, minutes' after being shot

Court hears Meyiwa would’ve survived ‘seconds, minutes' after being shot

A pathologist has told the Pretoria High Court that Senzo Meyiwa was shot at close range. 

Senzo Meyiwa

Dr Johannes Steenkamp, the state’s latest witness, told the court on Tuesday that when he inspected Meyiwa's wound, he found black granular particles inside. 

 

The bullet that hit Meyiwa penetrated his chest, subsequently lacerating his heart and collapsing his left lung.

 

Steenkamp, now retired, conducted 500 to 600 autopsies per year until he stopped working in 2016. 

 

He told the court Meyiwa would have died within seconds or minutes after he was shot. 

 

“The heart and the lungs are important organs. This type of injury can cause a fatality, sometimes instantaneously. I think, in this case, he was a fit young man. He probably would’ve survived seconds, minutes, definitely not hours.” 

 

The court also heard that the gun that killed Meyiwa was pressed against his chest, leading to the bullet lacerating his heart and lung. 

 

“The right chest cavity contains 1 700ml of free and clotted blood. We refer to this as internal blood loss from the heart and lungs. This was a result of the left lung collapsing,” Steenkamp said.

 

Various witnesses had testified to the fact that Meyiwa was still alive when his then-girlfriend Kelly Khumalo, her sister Zandile Khumalo, and friends Tumelo Madlala and Mthokozisi Thwala rushed the former Bafana Bafana captain to the hospital. 

 

Zandile told the court that Meyiwa kept squeezing her hand while he was being rushed to hospital. 

 

Neighbour Khaya Ngcasthe also testified that Meyiwa was still breathing when he found him lying in the passage shortly after he was shot. 

 

The state is expected to bring in a ballistics expert on Wednesday to give testimony to the gun that killed Meyiwa. 

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