High court case demands inquiry into 1985 Cradock Four killings and ‘constitutional damages’ worth £7.3m
Lukhanyo Calata’s first memory of his father was the funeral. His mother sobbing, the earth beneath his feet shaking from the number of people gathered at the graveside, and the fear he felt aged three as the red box holding his father, Fort, was lowered into the ground.
Fort Calata was one of four men stopped at a roadblock in June 1985 by security officers. The Cradock Four were beaten, strangled with telephone wire, stabbed and shot to death in one of the most notorious killings of South Africa’s apartheid era.
More Stories
North Korea behind $1.5bn hack of crypto exchange ByBit, says FBI
Trump threatens China with additional 10% tariff in escalation of trade war
New Apple technology could allow social media apps to tell whether users are under 16