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Pistorius has anxiety disorder

Last Updated 12 May 2014, 17:46 IST

Oscar Pistorius has an anxiety disorder brought on by an unstable childhood and the “traumatic assault” of having his lower legs amputated as a baby, a psychologist told the court hearing the South African track star’s murder trial on Monday.

Pistorius was born with fibulas in his lower legs, leading to amputation at the age of 11 months.
Testifying for the defence about his mental state, forensic psychiatrist Merryl Vorster said that because the surgery was at such a young age, it would have been impossible to reason with the baby, making the pyschological scars much deeper.

“He was too young to understand why,” Vorster told the court. “His mother could not have comforted him because he was pre-language phase. It would been perceived as traumatic assault.”

Pistorius is on trial for murder after shooting and killing his girlfriend, 29-year-old law graduate and model, Reeva Steenkamp on Valentine's Day last year.

The athlete says the shooting was a tragic mistake, and that he shot at a closed toilet door in his luxury Pretoria home thinking an intruder was hiding behind it.

The states alleges he fired at Steenkamp in a fit of rage after the couple had a row in the early hours of the morning.

If convicted of murder, Pistorius faces life in prison.

Vorster also said his parents’ divorce when he was a child would have added to the 27-year-old's general feelings of anxiety and insecurity.

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(Published 12 May 2014, 17:45 IST)

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