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Psychologist says Pistorius 'not able to testify'

Oscar Pistorius arriving in court this morning
Oscar Pistorius arriving in court this morning

Paralympic athlete Oscar Pistorius is suffering from depression, anxiety and stress and is not able to testify at his sentencing for murdering his girlfriend, a psychologist has told a South African court.

"He appeared to have limited energy ... he displayed signs and reported symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder, anxiety disorder and depressive disorder," Jonathan Scholtz said, after interviewing Pistorius.

"Currently he is not able to testify. His condition is severe."

Pistorius is due to be sentenced this week for the 2013 murder of his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp.

The 29-year-old, known as "Blade Runner" for the carbon-fibre prosthetic blades he used to race, faces a minimum 15-year jail sentence and cannot appeal after the country's top court ruled in March that he had exhausted all his legal options.

The track star, whose lower legs were amputated when he was a baby, initially received a five-year sentence for culpable homicide, South Africa's equivalent of manslaughter.

The conviction was later upgraded to murder after an appeal heard by the Supreme Court.

Original trial judge Thokozile Masipa will today hear pre-sentencing arguments at Pretoria High Court, with Pistorius expected to discover his fate by the end of the week.

The athlete's legal team is expected to call witnesses who will argue that Judge Masipa should be lenient because of the athlete's mental fragility, physical disability and good behaviour during almost a year behind bars for the original manslaughter conviction.

State prosecutor Gerrie Nel will cross-examine and call his own witnesses as he seeks to convince the judge that Pistorius is not remorseful, a key consideration in sentencing, and that it is in the interest of South African justice that the athlete receives a lengthy jail term.

Ms Steenkamp’s father Barry Steenkamp could take the stand, having given a number of emotional interviews calling for justice that he says would not be served if Pistorius is treated leniently.

State prosecutors said they would not disclose who their witnesses would be.

Pistorius's final days in court will mark the end of a dramatic fall from grace for an athlete who was once considered a heroic example of triumph over adversity.

The sprinter became the first double amputee to compete against able-bodied athletes when he raced at the London 2012 Olympics after a five-year fight for the right to run on equal terms.

He was released from prison last October after almost a year behind bars and allowed to serve out his term under house arrest on his uncle's property in a suburb of Pretoria.

But in December, the Supreme Court upgraded the conviction on appeal and Pistorius was allowed to stay at his uncle's mansion pending the final decisions on appeals and sentencing.

Pistorius denies deliberately killing model and law graduate Steenkamp, saying he mistook her for an intruder when he fired four shots through a locked toilet door in his Pretoria home.