Oscar Pistorius, the South African double amputee sprinter
who shot dead his girlfriend, is scheduled to be freed on parole on August 21
after serving just 10 months in jail, officials said Monday.
The proposed release date
provoked an angry reaction from the parents of model and television presenter
Reeva Steenkamp, 29, who Pistorius shot on Valentine's Day in 2013.
AFP report continues:
Pistorius, a role model
around the world after competing in the Paralympics and Olympics, claimed that
he mistook Steenkamp for an intruder, firing four shots through a locked
bathroom door.
"Incarceration of 10
months for taking a life is simply not enough," her parents June and Barry
Steenkamp said a statement released online.
"We fear that this
will not send out the proper message and serve as the deterrent it
should."
The statement added that
the family had "forgiven" Pistorius and did "not seek to
avenge" their daughter's death.
Pistorius, 28, was found
guilty last year of culpable homicide -- a charge akin to manslaughter -- and
sentenced to five years in prison for shooting Steenkamp.
"He has been
recommended for correctional supervision on August 21," Zach Modise,
commissioner of the correctional services, told AFP.
"Normally, this will
mean house arrest with one hour of free time each day. As he progresses, we
will relax these conditions."
The correctional
services' recommendation will now await final confirmation from the parole
board, which is due to issue its decision this week.
- State appeal -
Due to his physical
disability, Pistorius is being held in the hospital ward of a Pretoria prison,
shielding him from the often brutal overcrowded cells that are known for gang
violence.
State prosecutors are
appealing against his conviction for culpable homicide, saying he should have
been found guilty of murder.
The appeal hearing was
set on Monday for November -- three months after Pistorius could be freed.
"A specific date has
not been set yet, but we can confirm that the appeal will happen in November
this year," a Supreme Court official, who declined to be named, told AFP.
State prosecutors were
granted permission to appeal against the verdict, arguing that Judge Thokozile
Masipa misinterpreted the law when she ruled Pistorius did not intentionally
kill Steenkamp.
Pistorius's legal team unsuccessfully
tried to halt the appeal, saying the conviction was based on facts presented
during the trial and therefore could not be challenged.
The state argued he
deliberately killed the 29-year-old law graduate and reality television star
after an argument.
If an appeals court finds
him guilty of murder, the athlete -- known as the "Blade Runner" for
his prosthetic legs he wears on the track -- could face at least 15 years in
jail.
Pistorius, the first
double-amputee athlete to compete at the Olympic Games in London in 2012, was
jailed after a sensational months-long trial that made world headlines.
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