Latest News & Developments
Jeff Radebe's testimony at the Pietermaritzburg High Court on Tuesday shed light on the controversial death of Nobel Peace Prize winner Albert Luthuli.
For decades the original inquest had maintained that Luthuli, a Nobel Peace Prize laureate, died after being hit by a goods train on July 21, 1967, in Stanger, on the north coast of KwaZulu-Natal, but his family has maintained that he was murdered by the Apartheid State.
Wilhelmina May Luthuli, daughter-in-law of the late ANC President Albert Luthuli, shared harrowing details of his death in 1967, raising questions about the circumstances surrounding his demise.
Family members of Nobel Peace Prize winner Inkosi Albert Luthuli have expressed hope that the new inquest into his mysterious death will uncover the truth behind the events of July 21, 1967.
The National Prosecuting Authority reopens the inquest into Albert Luthuli's death, alleging that the original findings were predetermined and influenced by apartheid-era justice systems
The National Prosecuting Authority has presented evidence of an alleged apartheid-era conspiracy to cover up the true circumstances of Nobel Peace Prize winner Chief Albert Luthuli's death in 1967. New medical testimony suggests his injuries were inconsistent with being struck by a train and instead point to a possible assault.
The NPA announces the reopening of inquests into the deaths of Chief Albert John Mvumbi Luthuli and Mlungisi Griffiths Mxenge, following recommendations from the NDPP.