His voice trembling with
emotion, Oscar Pistorius took the witness stand in his own defense on Monday,
saying the Valentine's Day shooting of his girlfriend last year had left him
sleepless, terrified and plagued by nightmares.
The disabled South
African track star, on trial for murder,
apologized to the mother of model Reeva Steenkamp, saying he had fired four times through a toilet door at his luxury Pretoria home in the belief he was defending her from an intruder.
apologized to the mother of model Reeva Steenkamp, saying he had fired four times through a toilet door at his luxury Pretoria home in the belief he was defending her from an intruder.
Steenkamp, a law
graduate and model, was hit by at least three rounds, one of which - to the
head - killed her almost instantly, the court has heard.
"I was simply
trying to protect Reeva," Pistorius told the Pretoria High Court at the
start of his testimony. Reeva's mother June Steenkamp, sitting stony-faced in
the packed public gallery, bowed her head.
The 27-year-old Olympic
and Paralympic star, who faces life in prison if convicted of murder, testified
he had been on anti-depressants and sleeping pills because of his disturbed
state of mind since the shooting.
"I'm scared to
sleep. I have terrible nightmares about things that happened that night,"
he said.
"I can smell blood.
I wake up to being terrified."
He recounted one
occasion when he woke up so scared in the middle of the night that he crawled
into a cupboard before calling his sister, who came round to sit with him.
"I wake up in a
complete state of terror to the point that I would rather not sleep," he
said, adding that his faith had helped pull him through.
"There have been
times when I've just been struggling a lot," he said, fighting to maintain
his composure.
Oscar Pistorius weeps as
he listens to evidence by a pathologist in court in Pretoria, South
Africa, …
"My god is my god
of refuge."
Earlier, during graphic
forensic testimony from a defense pathologist, Pistorius retched into a bucket
in the dock.
OBSESSION WITH GUNS
The distraught,
bespectacled figure was in stark contrast to the gun-obsessed, fast-living
hothead that prosecutors had described in the first 16 days of the trial.
As well as murder,
Pistorius is accused of firing a pistol through the sun roof of a friend's car
while on a public road, and discharging a handgun under the table of a packed
Johannesburg restaurant.
He has pleaded not
guilty to all charges.
Now in its 17th day, the
trial has gripped South Africa and millions of fans around the world who have seen
in Pistorius a symbol of triumph over physical adversity.
The sprinter's lower
legs were amputated as a baby but he went on to achieve global fame as the
"Blade Runner", after the slender carbon fiber prosthetic limbs he
wears on the track.
After winning gold
medals at the Beijing and London Paralympics, he stunned the world by reaching
the semi-finals of the 400 meters in the London Olympics against able-bodied
athletes.
In testimony, Pistorius
described his difficult early years as a disabled child before his sporting
prowess earned him respect and recognition at school.
He also spoke of the
pressures of fame, the toll travelling to athletics meetings took on his family
and personal life and of his fears of life in crime-ridden South Africa.
"When we were
growing up, we were exposed to crime - house break-ins, family members being
assaulted and hijacked," he said. "Many members of my family have
been victims of house break-ins and violent crime."
"EXHAUSTED"
His defense hinges on
his assertion, made under oath at his bail hearing, that he mistook Steenkamp
for an intruder hiding in the toilet and opened fire.
However, witnesses
living close to Pistorius' home in a gated Pretoria community have testified to
hearing the terrified screams of a woman before and during a volley of shots in
the early hours of February 14, 2014.
South Africa's firearms
and self-defense laws make clear a person may only shoot if there is a direct
threat to somebody's life - regulations Pistorius acknowledged in a written
gun-license test presented by the prosecution.
Ashen-faced, Pistorius
said he had not slept the night before his testimony, leading Judge Thokozile
Masipa to adjourn the session early after little more than an hour of
cross-examination.
"He does look
exhausted," Masipa said. "He does sound exhausted." As he
stepped from the witness box, Pistorius slumped into the outstretched arms of
his sister Aimee.

Chapisha Maoni