- Two apartheid-era police officers were found guilty of murdering student activist Caiphus Nyoka in 1987.
- The Pretoria High Court ruled the murder was premeditated, based on witness testimony.
- The National Prosecuting Authority welcomed the conviction as a step toward justice.
The Pretoria High Court has found Abraham Hercules Engelbrecht and Pieter Stander guilty of the premeditated murder of Caiphus Nyoka, a student activist and member of the Congress of South African Students (COSAS). Their former commanding officer, Leon van den Berg, was acquitted.
Nyoka was shot nine times in his home in Daveyton, Gauteng, in August 1987, after friends were forcibly removed from the room. The court’s decision follows testimony from five witnesses, including Nyoka’s sisters and a Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) researcher, which enabled the state to prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt.
On the night of 23 August 1987, Engelbrecht, 61, and Stander, 60, both members of the South African Police Service’s Reaction Unit, met to plan the killing of Nyoka. In the early hours of 24 August, at approximately 2.30am, they arrived at Nyoka’s homestead with other Reaction Unit members. Nyoka, asleep with three friends, was identified, his friends were removed from the room, and he was shot nine times, dying instantly from multiple gunshot wounds.
Testimony and judgment in court
The state called five witnesses during the trial: Nyoka’s sisters Alegria and Mothasi Nyoka, friend Gugulakhe Exodus Nyokane, TRC researcher Dr Rousseau, and investigating officer Lieutenant Colonel Beukman. After their testimony, Engelbrecht and Stander filed a Section 174 application, arguing that the State had no case to answer. The court dismissed this, and the accused closed their cases.
In delivering judgment, the court concluded the evidence demonstrated clear premeditation and intent to kill Nyoka. The acquittal of Leon van den Berg, 75, will be reviewed by the State before any further action is considered.
NPA: conviction a step towards justice
The National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) welcomed the judgment, describing it as a “right step towards providing justice for the Nyoka family.” Engelbrecht and Stander remain in custody, with the matter postponed to 11 December 2025 for their bail application pending sentencing.
“This conviction reminds us of the importance of accountability, even decades after the crime. Families of victims deserve closure and recognition of the wrongs committed against them,” the NPA said in a statement.
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