Oscar Pistorius said he never picked on Reeva Steenkamp, and he
didn't get a chance to tell her that he loved her before she died.
Prosecutor Gerrie Nel picked apart message exchanges between the
couple, accusing the athlete of screaming at his girlfriend and acting
selfishly toward her.
Messages between the couple showed the athlete unfairly criticized
her and disregarded her feelings, Nel said.
But Pistorius denied it.
'I didn't treat her badly," he said.
Asked if Steenkamp had lied he picked on her incessantly,
Pistorius replied: "She never lied."
Nel bluntly highlighted an incident where Steenkamp complained in
a message that Pistorius asked her to stop chewing gum. He also read a message
where she defended herself against Pistorius' accusations that she flirted at a
party. .
"You were strong enough in that relationship to say stop your
voices, stop your accents, stop chewing gum," the prosecutor said. But
Pistorius said he gently told her to stop chewing gum before they got on
camera.
Nel said Pistorius never responded to Steenkamp's message in
which she said, "I'm the girl who fell in love with you."
"We did a search ... the phrase 'I love you' appears twice on
her phone, to her mother," the prosecutor said. "Apart from 'boo boo,
baa, baa' you never wrote a long message to Reeva."
"Because it was all about Mr. Pistorius," Nel said.
More cross-examination
The Olympic sprinter was back on the stand Thursday for further
cross-examination in his murder trial after a day of relentless and combative
questioning. He has pleaded not guilty to murder and said he mistakenly shot
Steenkamp at his house on Valentine's Day last year, thinking she was an
intruder
The athlete maintained he would like to meet Steenkamp's parents
to apologize.
"I don't think they will ever want to meet me," he said.
"I am terribly sorry that I took the life of their daughter."
Pistorius said he did not discharge a firearm in a Johannesburg
restaurant in an incident last year.
"The firearm discharged. I was trying to make it safe,"
he said.
Pistorius said he repeatedly took the blame for the incident, but
the prosecutor tried to poke holes in his declaration.
"This is incredible, You never touched the trigger, the gun
went off. You took the blame, your took responsibility but not one
remembers," Nel said.
'You shot and killed her. Say it.'
A day before, a defiant Nel barked at the Olympic star on the
stand.
"You shot and killed her. Say it -- 'I shot and killed Reeva
Steenkamp, '" Nel told Pistorius on the first day of cross-examination
Wednesday.
No one disputes that Pistorius killed Steenkamp. But the
prosecution is trying to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that he did so
knowingly and intentionally.
The 27-year old has admitted to the killing, but said he mistook
Steenkamp for an intruder in the bathroom when he fired through the door and
killed her.
Before Nel went after Pistorius, defense lawyer Barry Roux had
tossed his client a question to drive that argument home. He asked Pistorius if
he intentionally killed Steenkamp.
"I did not intend to kill Reeva or anybody else for that
matter," he replied.
Later in the proceedings, as Nel probed him further, Pistorius
insisted he thought he would be attacked when he heard noise coming from his
bathroom that night.
"I had a fear, I didn't have time to think, I discharged my
firearm ... I didn't intend to shoot at anyone, I shot out of fear."
'Zombie stopper'
Nel took the defense team by surprise Wednesday when he asked the
athlete about a shooting range video in which Pistorius is seen firing at a
watermelon, and then calling the impact "a zombie-stopper."
This prompted the defense to complain that the prosecution was
staging an "ambush" by introducing evidence. The court was briefly
adjourned as Judge Thokozile Masipa considered both positions. The defense
later said it would not object to the video being shown in court.
"It makes me very upset to hear myself saying something like
that," Pistorius said as he admitted to making the comment. But he
insisted he was referring "to a zombie, not a human being."
Nel showed the court a graphic photo of Steenkamp's wounded head.
Speaking of the watermelon in the video, the prosecutor said: "It
exploded. You know the same happened to Reeva?"
Pistorius snapped, sobbing.
"I was there, I don't have to look at a picture," he
said.
'My life is on the line'
Nel is going over the version of events that
Pistorius provided in an earlier bail application affidavit, and the one he's
given on the witness stand this week.
Pistorius has told the court what he remembered from the night
Steenkamp died, starting with the moment he opened his bathroom door after
shooting through it and saw her bloodied body.
On Tuesday, he described tearfully how, gripped by fear, he shot
Steenkamp dead through the locked toilet door, thinking she was an intruder.
The prosecution alleges Pistorius killed his girlfriend after they
argued. Several witnesses have testified to hearing a man's shouts coming from
the house, although they have also spoken of the terrified screams of a woman
leading up to and during a volley of shots.
The trial has gripped South Africa, where Pistorius is considered
a symbol of triumph over physical adversity.
His disabled lower legs were amputated as a baby, but he went on
to achieve global fame as the "blade runner," winning numerous
Paralympic gold medals on the steel blades fitted to his prostheses.
Only those in the courtroom can see Pistorius because he has
chosen not to testify on camera. His testimony can be heard on an audio feed.
'I'm obsessed with looking at him'
The athlete said he would like to meet Steenkamp's parents, but
understood that they wouldn't want to.
"I don't think they will ever want to meet me," he said.
" I am terribly sorry that I took the life of their daughter."
Steenkamp's mother, June, sat in court throughout Pistorius' three
days on the stand.
In an interview with the UK's Mirror newspaper, she said she is
still trying to decide whether the sprinter is acting as he defends himself
against the murder charge.
"I look at Oscar the whole time, to see how he is coping, how
he is behaving. I'm obsessed with looking at him, it's just instinctive, I
can't explain it," she said.
"I keep thinking, 'let me see how he's taking this'. He has
been very dramatic, the vomiting and crying."
Talking about Pistorius' apology this week, she said: "It
left me unmoved. I knew it was coming. My lawyers had prepared me for it."
"I cried for the first time, 'Yes', but not because he
apologized, because of the suffering and agony that my darling daughter went
through and because I will never have her again."
The trial is scheduled to continue until the middle of May.
Judge Masipa will decide the verdict in collaboration with two
experts called assessors. South Africa does not have jury trials.
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