A South African judge on Wednesday ordered that Oscar
Pistorius undergo psychiatric tests to establish if he has a “general anxiety
disorder,” raising the prospect of lengthy delays in his murder trial.
Judge Thokozile
Masipa said a “proper inquiry” was needed to test whether the sprinter had the
disorder that could mean he was not fully responsible for his actions in
shooting his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp last year.
“The accused may
not have raised the issue that he was not criminally responsible at the time of
the incident in so many words, but evidence led on his behalf clearly raises
the issue and cannot be ignored,” she said.
Masipa said a
full order will be made next Tuesday, when the court will reconvene, but indicated
she may be amenable to a proposal for Pistorius to be treated as an outpatient.
The tests were
not meant as punishment, she said, adding that she was unconcerned by any delay
caused as long as it was in the interest of justice.
Prosecutor Gerrie
Nel had asked the court to have Pistorius committed Tuesday, after defence
psychiatrist Meryll Vorster claimed the sprinter’s deep-seated anxiety would
have given him a heightened fear of crime. During two months of trial,
Pistorius’s lawyers have sought to portray him as manically obsessed with
safety after a difficult childhood and in the face of high crime levels in
South Africa.
Those factors,
they argue, help explain his reaction on Valentine’s Day last year when he
allegedly believed his girlfriend to be an intruder and shot her dead through a
locked toilet door.
Nel said he did
not believe Pistorius’s mental state was unusual, but warned the athlete’s
defence team may try to use that evidence to limit sentencing, launch an appeal
or reset the case.
“My lady, accused
persons have in the past replaced their counsel, particularly when things go
wrong,” said Nel.
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