Cape Town - The opposition on Friday targeted deputy president Cyril Ramaphosa among top officials they want prosecuted after the release of Marikana Report.
The Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF), led by Julius Malema, said it would take action to ensure the “political elite” behind the 2012 killings at Lonmin's Marikana mine were jailed.
“We shall not rest until justice is served and those responsible are sent to rot in jail, particularly Cyril Ramaphosa,” the EFF said in a statement.
The main opposition Democratic Alliance (DA) welcomed the report's recommendations on improving the police's ability to handle violent protests, but said it was "perplexed" that the police minister was not held responsible -- as well as by the silence of the commission on potential compensation for the families.
"We will be doing two things: one is to ensure all recommendations are followed and implemented, but most importantly and inevitably, the second thing will be to hold the former police minister accountable and table a motion within the national assembly," said DA lawmaker James Selfe.
The report of a commission of inquiry into the worst police violence in South Africa since the end of apartheid was released by President Jacob Zuma on Thursday night.
On August 16, 2012, after days of violent protests at Lonmin platinum mine, police opened fire on a group of demonstrating workers, killing 34 people.
In the days leading up to the attack, 10 others had been killed in violence related to the strike - including non-striking miners, security guards and two police officers who were hacked to death.
The Marikana Report has called for the officers involved to face a criminal investigation and for an inquiry into National Police Commissioner Riah Phiyega's fitness to hold office.
But it cleared senior government officials of any culpability, including then police minister Nathi Mthwethwa and former mines minister Susan Shabangu.
It also exonerated Ramaphosa, who was then a non-executive director and shareholder at Lonmin but held no government office, saying the accusations against him were “groundless”.
Lawyers for the survivors of the shooting had accused him of triggering the massacre.
The inquiry heard that Ramaphosa contacted the ministers of police and mining ahead of the killings, pushing for police intervention to end a strike that had already turned deadly.
But Ramaphosa has maintained he was simply trying to prevent further bloodshed and denies pressing for a violent crackdown.
The Marikana Support Campaign, an NGO, said it and affiliate organisations including trade unions “will not allow the lives lost in Marikana to be in vain.”
“The exoneration of Cyril Ramaphosa, Nathi Mthwetha, Susan Shabangu and the entire executive is perhaps the most shocking finding of all,” it said in a statement.
“In terms of Ramaphosa this is nothing short of a whitewash.”
AFP