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Former Paralympic champion Oscar Pistorius will be released from prison in January, nearly 11 years after murdering his girlfriend.

Pistorius shot Reeva Steenkamp on Valentine’s Day 2013 at his home in Pretoria, South Africa.

He said he fired his gun through a bathroom door after mistaking her for an intruder in the early hours.

The 37-year-old has been granted parole from 5 January, said South Africa‘s department of correctional services.

The parole will last until 5 December 2029 and he will be subject to conditions.

He won’t be able to leave his area of Pretoria without permission, he must attend therapy for anger issues and “gender-based violence issues”, and he will do community service.

“Parole does not mean the end of the sentence. It is still part of the sentence,” said prisons’ spokesperson Singabakho Nxumalo.

“It only means the inmate will complete the sentence outside a correctional facility.”

Ms Steenkamp’s mother reacted to the parole by insisting Pistorius intentionally killed her daughter.

“My dearest child screamed for her life… I believe he knew it was Reeva,” she said in a statement.

The former athlete is expected to spend parole at his uncle’s mansion in a wealthy suburb – the same place he stayed during the trial.

Oscar Pistorius
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Pistorius is less than two months from being free again

His case – a decade ago – was televised in a blaze of publicity and made headlines around the world.

The prosecution argued the killing was premeditated and that he shot his model girlfriend after she fled to the toilet following a row.

He was initially not found guilty of murder and instead convicted of culpable homicide (the equivalent of manslaughter).

He was sentenced to five years in 2014 and eventually released to house arrest.

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Pistorius parole details revealed

A year later, the conviction was overturned by the Supreme Court of Appeal and he was found guilty of murder.

It ruled he should have foreseen the possibility of killing someone when he fired shots into the bathroom.

He was given six years in 2016 – later increased to 13 years and five months after it was deemed “shockingly lenient”.

The parole board considered his case again on Friday after denying him parole in March.

‘No one believes his story’

Ms Steenkamp’s mother had a statement read out by a family friend outside the prison.

She said she wasn’t opposing the parole and didn’t attend the hearing as “I simply cannot muster the energy to face him again at this stage”.

“I do not believe Oscar’s version that he thought the person in the toilet was a burglar,” June Steenkamp added.

“In fact, I do not know anybody who does. My dearest child screamed for her life… I believe he knew it was Reeva.”

Ms Steenkamp said she wasn’t convinced Pistorius had been rehabilitated as “rehabilitation requires someone to engage honestly with the full truth of his crime and the consequences”.

Read more: Who is Oscar Pistorius? From ‘blade runner’ to convicted murderer

 Nov. 4, 2012 file photo, South African Olympic athlete Oscar Pistorius and Reeva Steenkamp arrive for an awards ceremony in Johannesburg, South Africa
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Pistorius with his model girlfriend in November 2012

Her husband, Barry Steenkamp, who attended the original trial alongside her, died in September aged 80.

Pistorius met with him inside jail in 2022 as part of a restorative justice programme that brings offenders and victims together.

Global star to murderer

The decision for a second parole hearing came after his lawyer took his case to the constitutional court over errors in calculating when he would be eligible for parole.

He was initially told he would only be eligible in August 2024, when he was in fact eligible in March.

Granting a second hearing was seen as effectively an admission of the court’s error.

Oscar Pistorius demonstrating to the court how he walks without his prosthetic legs
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During his trial Pistorius demonstrated how he walks without his prosthetics

Serious offenders are eligible for parole in South Africa after serving at least half their sentence.

Pistorius was born in 1986 and at 11 months old his legs were amputated below the knee because of a congenital defect.

He went on to compete at the Paralympics and became the first double amputee to compete in the Olympics.

Known as the Blade Runner because of his carbon fiber legs, Pistorius established himself as an internationally recognised star and the most famous Paralympic athlete.

While locked up, his father said his son had held bible classes for other prisoners.

However there have also been glimpses of trouble, including a row over a phone that left him needing medical treatment.

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Ex-CIA director John Brennan calls Donald Trump’s plan in Ukraine ‘naive’ and ‘unsophisticated’

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Ex-CIA director John Brennan calls Donald Trump's plan in Ukraine 'naive' and 'unsophisticated'

It is nearly 150 days since Donald Trump took office for the second time, promising peace in the Middle East and Ukraine.

For the latter, the war grinds on, with reports last week that Russia passed the grim milestone of one million deaths.

Ukraine continues to be bombarded, with Russia launching its biggest drone attack against the country since the start of the war. Most likely in retaliation for Ukraine’s audacious Operation ‘Spider’s Web’ at the beginning of the month, which saw remote-controlled drones launched deep into Russia, blowing up billions of dollars’ worth of military equipment.

Russia saw this as a significant escalation, as Moscow’s ambassador to the UK told me in a sit-down interview last week.

Ukraine war latest: Moscow launches deadly strikes

Peace feels a long way off right now.

But does President Trump have a plan?

Ex-CIA director John Brennan does not think so.

On this week’s The World podcast, he called Trump’s understanding of both Ukraine and Vladimir Putin “naive” and “unsophisticated”.

I asked him what he thinks the president may do and, in no uncertain terms, he told me: “I think that Donald Trump doesn’t know what he will do.”

Ex-CIA Director John Brennan
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Ex-CIA director John Brennan thinks Trump doesn’t know what he will do in Ukraine. File pic: AP

It is no secret that the former director holds a low estimation of the president. For what it’s worth, the feeling is mutual.

In January, Trump revoked the director’s security clearance, and during his first term called him the “worst” CIA chief in history.

But, Brennan knows Ukraine.

Some reports say that it was during his time as director that the CIA began training Ukrainian spies.

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Russia’s ambassador to UK blames Britain for drone strikes

When he first visited the country in 2014, he recounts how the forces “were still riddled with a lot of the Russian services”, but a decade later, what is his assessment of the country’s military?

“Pound for pound, [it] punches above the weight of virtually every other military on the globe, I would say including the United States, given the tremendous experience that they’ve gained on the battlefield”.

So, does the director really believe Ukraine’s allies had no prior warning of Ukraine’s drone attack?

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A career spook, he trod carefully around the questions, but admitted: “I don’t doubt for a moment that they were given some additional assistance from Western intelligence and military authorities and capabilities.

“The Ukrainians have done a lot on their own, but I think a lot of this is initially enabled by some ideas that come from their Western allies.”

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As the battlefields of Ukraine dry out to face another summer of war, this conflict continues to prove it is the “laboratory of the future”, as my co-host Richard Engel described it. The drone war intensifies, as does the battle of words between the two countries.

As a war of attrition continues in Ukraine, will Donald Trump, now preoccupied with protests in Los Angeles and unleashing thousands more troops on demonstrators, walk away from Ukraine and abandon it?

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Is Ukraine winning the spy war? In conversation with ex-CIA chief

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Is Ukraine winning the spy war? In conversation with ex-CIA chief

👉Listen to The World with Richard Engel and Yalda Hakim on your podcast app👈

This week, Richard is in Ukraine, recording just hours after the country was hit with 500 drones from Russia. He is in Mykolaiv and brings Yalda up to speed with what the city is like, over two years into the conflict.

Yalda then takes Richard behind the scenes of her headline-making interview with the Russian ambassador to the UK who blamed Britain for the Operation “Spiderweb” drone attack.

Then, they are joined by ex-CIA director John Brennan who was head of the spy organisation from 2013 to 2017. He was in post when the CIA began working with and training Ukrainians and he tells Richard and Yalda why he thinks Ukrainian spies are now some of the best in the world.

He also gives his take on Donald Trump’s peace plans, which he calls “naïve” and “unsophisticated”.

The three of them also dissect the protests going on in LA.

To get in touch or to share questions for Richard and Yalda, email theworld@sky.uk

Episodes of The World With Richard Engel And Yalda Hakim will be available every Wednesday on all podcast platforms.

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US-China trade talks: The fact neither side is saying much on the outcome – says a lot

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US-China trade talks: The fact neither side is saying much on the outcome - says a lot

In the absence of detail, all we can do is read between the lines of what may or may not have been agreed in the London talks between the US and China.

And a degree of scepticism feels appropriate.

The fact neither side is saying much says a lot in itself. A major new breakthrough seems unlikely.

You only need to compare it to the conduct of the delegations following the first round of talks in Geneva to feel the difference in tone. Those talks did indeed yield significant breakthroughs including temporary reductions to most of the tariffs and an agreement to keep talking.

There, the Americans in particular were quick to get in front of the cameras to describe the “substantial progress” with Trump himself extolling “a total reset” in the relationship.

Not so this time.

Instead we have relatively dry statements from both sides about a “framework to implement the consensus” reached at both Geneva and during a phone call between Trump and Xi last week.

Any further description was tepid at best, with China’s official news agency describing the discussions as “candid” a word often used when there has been substantial disagreement.

Read more: Why Trump blinked in US-China trade war

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May: US and China end trade war

High stakes

It’s hard to overstate how high the stakes have become.

What started as a trade war has morphed into a dangerous supply chain war with the potential to wreak deep economic harm.

And by most assessments, it is China that has the upper hand.

Indeed, while the US has introduced a spate of new measures designed to block China’s access to high-tech chips, China has moved to slow and complicate the exports of crucial rare earth minerals to the US.

These metals are absolutely vital in the manufacture of everything from cars to weaponry, and China has the vast majority of the world’s supply.

The new controls have brought some production lines to the brink of standstill, and the West is alarmed.

On the ground here in China you get a sense that while this standoff will cause pain, there is confidence too, particularly in its ability to home grow the type of technology the US is attempting to block.

Indeed, as these talks were ongoing, a branch of the Chinese government was showing foreign journalists around usually hard-to-access high-tech businesses.

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April: US ends zero duty on Chinese goods

A confident China

A controlled and choreographed affair, yes, but an insight too into where government attention and priorities lie and where they are feeling confident.

“We’ve caught up with America in terms of technology and quality,” said Zhou Zhiliang, CEO of GeneMind, a high-tech DNA sequencing and diagnostics company.

“We just need to catch up in terms of the market, building trust in Chinese products and the scale of utilisation.”

Others, when we asked about restrictions imposed by the US, seemed relatively unfazed.

“The trade friction between China and US will have an impact on many industries,” said Zhang Jinhua, founder of IASO Biotechnology, a company specialising in high-tech cell therapies.

“But this is what running a business is like, you always have to face challenges and situations you never expected before, you have to face them.”

And while some moments of candour reveal the frustrations faced by Chinese businesses, the attitude seems to be that none are insurmountable.

“We were selling our products via Amazon, although we now face some problems,” said Yu Kai, co-founder of conversational AI product AISpeech.

“But I believe it can be solved. The current technology dispute doesn’t affect us very much, because we rely on ourselves.”

Indeed, that is the key problem for the US.

China can increasingly rely on itself and is making rapid progress in the development of its own chips and AI technology.

Read more:
Why Trump blinked in US-China trade war
Diplomatic win for UK hosting US-China trade talks

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In contrast, the US is totally beholden to China on rare earths; the development of its own supply would be lengthy and extortionately expensive.

With this upper hand, China will have been driving an exceedingly hard bargain in London.

In an atmosphere of extreme distrust, where neither side will want to be seen to concede, reaching a sustainable truce will be very hard indeed.

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