Late
model Reeva Steenkamp's mother June Steenkamp said Reeva confided in
her before she was shot dead on Val's day 2013 that she'd never had sex
with Oscar Pistorius. June made this revelation in her yet to be
released book titled
“Reeva: a Mother's Story”. In an extract
from the book in Times Magazine, June wrote that Reeva told her that
although they spent nights together, they didn't have sex because she
'was scared to take the relationship to that level'.
"She had confided to me that she hadn’t slept with him. They’d shared a
bed, but she was scared to take the relationship to that level. She
wouldn’t want to sleep with Oscar if she wasn’t sure. I believe their
relationship was coming to an end. In her heart of hearts, she didn’t
think it was making either of them happy.” June wrote. Continue...
Speaking about Oscar, June wrote
"To look at him now, he's a pathetic figure. He looks haunted. He's already been punished in a way.
“Whatever is in his head is in his head forever. He will have to live with that.”
"It was Reeva’s bad luck that she met him, because sooner or later he would have killed someone. I do believe that.”
June also wrote that she didn't believe Oscar's version.
“He said pulling the trigger was 'an accident'. What? Four times an
accident? He said Reeva did not scream, but she would definitely have
screamed. I know my daughter as she was very vocal.
“There is
no doubt in our minds that something went horribly wrong, something
upset her so terribly that she hid behind a locked door with two mobile
phones.”
She also talked about how she and Reeva's father are dealing with their grief
"Both of us are haunted by the same nightmare. The vision of Reeva
suffering this terrible trauma. Her terror and helplessness. Her yells
for help piercing the silent night air. Barry agonises over what was
going through her mind. ‘Where is anyone? Who is going to save me?’About Oscar's apology she said
"Why decide to say sorry to me in a televised trial in front of the whole world? I was unmoved by his apology.
"I felt if I appeared to be sorry for him at this stage of his trial
on the charge of premeditated murder, it would in the eyes of others
lessen the awfulness of what he had done."
"He was in the box
trying to save his own skin after he had killed my daughter and I was
sitting in that courtroom wanting to hear the factual truth, not to see
emotions cloud the truth."
“We’re not looking for vengeance
or for him to get hurt; we’re just happy because he’s going to be
punished for what he’s done.
“He may come out early on good
behaviour, but by the time he’s served that time, it will have taught
him that he can’t go around doing things like that.” June wrote
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