South African police gun down striking platinum miners at Marikana mine
Volley of gunfire from assault rifles kills several workers involved in ongoing feud between unions

South African riot police opened fire on striking miners armed with machetes and sticks at Lonmin's Marikana platinum mine yesterday, killing several men in the deadliest episode of a week of union violence.
Heavily armed officers backed by armoured cars were laying out barricades when they were outflanked by some of the estimated 3,000 miners massed near the mine, 100 kilometres northwest of Johannesburg.
Police opened fire with automatic weapons on a group of men who burst out from behind a vehicle. Television footage showed seven bodies lying on the ground after the volley.
South Africa's Sapa news agency said one of its reporters had counted 18 bodies.
It was not clear whether the police were fired on. Photographs showed spears and clubs lying near the bodies.
Police said several days of talks with leaders of the Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union (AMCU), which was representing most of the strikers, had broken down, leaving no option but to disperse them by force.