South African police have been
accused of planting weapons near the bodies of workers killed during strikes at
the Marikana platinum mine.
Photographs taken by police
suggested large knives had been placed near the bodies after they had been
shot, a lawyer told an inquest into the deaths.
Thirty-four miners died when police
opened fire at striking miners in August, leading to widespread shock.
The police say they were acting in
self-defence.
The bloodshed occurred on 16 August,
days after the deaths of 10 people, including two police officers who were
hacked to death. Judges are holding an inquiry into all 44 of the deaths.
The inquiry was presented with
photographs showing the bodies of the miners after the shooting - the most
deadly police action since the end of apartheid in 1994.
Machetes and handcuffs
In one photograph, a dead man is
seen lying on rocky ground near the mine. A second picture, taken later the
same day, is identical except a yellow-handled machete is now lying under the
man's right hand.
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