The shooting of black men in the US has inspired the Black Lives Matter movement. (Joshua Lott/Getty Images)
- The South African Council of Churches held silent protests on Sunday against law enforcement brutality.
- The council strongly condemned the killing of people by law enforcement, saying it is reminiscent of apartheid.
- It held a silent protest in Pretoria on Sunday afternoon, and prayers were conducted in Cape Town.
The South African Council of Churches (SACC) held silent protests on Sunday condemning the brutality of law enforcement officials as well as the deaths of Collins Khosa in South Africa, George Floyd in the US and others.
The protest follows the SA National Defence Force (SANDF) absolving the army of responsibility for Khosa’s death.
“It feels like we’ve been here before, yes, in apartheid days; or in George Floyd’s Minneapolis! What a week to announce this ‘No One to Blame’ verdict,” the SACC’s general-secretary, Bishop Malusi Mpumlwana, said in a statement on Sunday.
“Faith leaders, alarmed by these developments, are gripped in lament and despair over the deaths of innocent people at the hands of law enforcement officers,” according to the SACC.
It said it recognised investigations were ongoing, adding the deaths of citizens was a “serious concern” and a “blot on the tapestry of our constitutional democracy”.
The council protested at St Albans Anglican Cathedral in Pretoria, while prayers will be conducted by Archbishop Thabo Makgobo in Cape Town’s St George’s Anglican Cathedral.
The silent prayer demonstration of religious leaders coincides with protests led by the BlackLivesMatter movement after the death of George Floyd in the USA. Anglican Archbishop Thabo Makgoba will deliver a message on behalf of the leaders at the end of the protest #sabcnews pic.twitter.com/Z8uY7PzBQl
— Chris Mabuya (@ChrisMabuya) June 7, 2020
“As we mourn the deaths of the #Lockdown12, we intend to remember and make known their names:
“#CollinsKhosa – Male, 40, died in Alexandra, Johannesburg, on 10 April 2020 (Good Friday).
“#PetrusMiggels – Male, 55, died in Ravensmead, Cape Town, on 27 March 2020.
“#SibusisoAmos – Male, 40, died in Vosloorus, Ekhurhuleni, on 29 March 2020.
“#AdaneEmmanuel – Male died in Isipingo, Durban, on 2 April 2020.
“#RobynMontsumi – Female, 39, died in Mowbray police station on 12 April 2020.
“#Unnamed7.”
The SACC said it also stood in solidarity with those who lost their lives in the US, including Ahmaud Arbery, Breanna Taylor, Atatiana Jefferson, and others.
“Our intention is that this silent vigil will be a clear expression of our disdain for the current brutality exhibited by our police and defence forces and to call for greater accountability and justice for these families.
“We are also standing in the gap for ordinary citizens who are equally experiencing the grief and mourning that this current moment has brought upon us,” it added.