A deal to protect the mighty
SOME OF THE most bitter and revealing
exchanges at the Truth and Reconciliation Commission have occurred
since the main body has been wound up and proceedings have continued
before the amnesty committee. The former security police chief and
police commissioner, General Johann Coetzee, has sat haplessly as a
succession of his former operatives — men such as Craig Williamson, Vic
McPherson and Eugene de Kock — have told the committee that he ordered
them to commit this, that or the other atrocity.
“I had a long and close association with Coetzee throughout my
security force careeer,” testified Williamson. “If I had a mentor, it
would have been Coetzee.” Williamson, who (like Coetzee) is applying
for amnesty for the bombing of the ANC’s London office in 1982, said
Coetzee had ordered him to do the job and had told him that the orders
came from “the very top”. Presumably he meant the late police minister,
Louis Le Grange, and former state president P.W. Botha.
These hearings suggest that behind the TRC’s proceedings lies an
implicit deal between the NP and ANC, a deal which has only frayed as
they have reached the sharp end — who exactly will carry the can for
these atrocities? That all this is happening with Archbishop Tutu and
Dr Alex Boraine off stage, only confirms the impression that the main
hearings of the TRC have been, at least in part, a bogus exercise.
There seems to be a charmed circle of former elite actors who are not
to be held responsible for anything that happened under them, while the
real question is who below them will be thrown to the wolves.
The first sign of something strange afoot was the pattern of silence
and belated denial that followed the shock confession before the TRC in
mid-July by the former minister of law and order, Adriaan Vlok. He
admitted culpability for bombing the trade union headquarters, Cosatu
House, in 1987, and the South African Council of Churches building,
Khotso House, in 1988, and for placing bombs at cinemas screening the
anti-apartheid film, Cry Freedom. Vlok confessed as part of his bid for
amnesty, and not only became the first ex-minister to admit to serious
crimes but also implicated ex-President P.W. Botha who, he said, had
ordered the bombings.
Moreover, Vlok and former police commissioner General Johan van der
Merwe effectively accused former President F.W. de Klerk of lying to
the TRC in 1996, when he denied knowledge of illegal police activities.
Vlok said that he had briefed de Klerk about the bombings in 1991.
Mandela too had been briefed on the subject in 1993 in order to get him
to intervene to put a stop to Judge Richard Goldstone’s investigation
of the Khotso House atrocity. The testimony was dynamite, implying that
both Mandela and de Klerk had knowledge of the bombings that they had
failed to reveal and that there had been political interference with
the course of justice — in which Judge Goldstone had acquiesced.
De Klerk first issued a formal statement saying he had told the truth;
then, as further revelations emerged, maintained a stony silence before
issuing a statement accepting that he had, after all, had knowledge of
the state’s culpability in the bombings. Mandela’s spokesman, Parks
Mankahlana, issued a furious statement denying that Mandela had been
informed of such matters or had stopped the Goldstone inquiry. However,
Mankahlana’s credibility was just about zero at that point, following
his equally furious denials that his boss was about to be married. It
is clear, moreover, that Mankahlana has often issued statements before
the president has been consulted. Mandela himself, then on tour in
Latin America, was silent for several days and then merely said that
van der Merwe’s recollection of their conversation was mistaken. But,
he did not deny having contacted Goldstone or of having knowledge of
the bombings. Goldstone himself has remained stum. This is remarkable
when one considers that his judicial reputation was on the line: to
have terminated a judicial inquiry at the behest of a politician would
take some serious explaining. What is not in doubt is that Goldstone
did abruptly and inexplicably terminate his investigation of the Khotso
House bombing, turning it over to the Transvaal attorney-general, Jan
d’Oliveira, from whom nothing more about the matter was heard.
Finally, van der Merwe, many days after press accounts of his original
testimony had appeared, suddenly denied that he had ever asked Mandela
to stop the Goldstone investigation, thus flatly contradicting his
earlier testimony which, he said, had been “misunderstood”. Vlok,
however, stood by what he said. The overwhelming impression was of a
clumsy cover-up after arm-twisting behind the scenes.
The whole episode seems to confirm the rumours that have long
circulated that the high commands of the National Party and ANC struck
a deal in 1990 guaranteeing security from prosecution for the leading
actors on either side and protecting the identies of the spies in each
camp. How could they negotiate a new democratic order over a period of
years without a basic level of trust? And how to achieve that trust if
one side constantly feared that the other was aiming eventually to
traduce it before some Nuremberg trial? There would have to be a TRC
and some part of the truth would have to be told — but the whole
exercise would be subject to this protective deal. All that would be
required of ministers in the former apartheid government was a formal
apology for apartheid not a detailed investigation of crimes committed
under their jurisdiction. The targets would be the lower-level security
police thugs and assassins.
The existence of such a deal would make sense of the remarkable
immunity of NP cabinet ministers. Some have put that down to a
miraculously thorough process of document-shredding — but this ignores
the personal witness testimony that could have been obtained for many
acts of inhumanity ranging from torture to forced removals. Even the
pursuit of security policemen was curiously partial: many operatives
who carried out torture, savage beatings and dirty tricks have never
even been named, let alone prosecuted. A deal would also account for
the way in which the TRC pursued P.W. Botha. Few doubt that he was
directly responsible for innumerable state crimes and atrocities
carried out between 1978 and 1989, but the TRC showed singularly little
interest in pinning any of this on him. Instead it almost implored him
just to come along and say he was sorry, hug Archbishop Tutu and be
done with it. If such a deal exists, Botha doubtless knows all about
it. It looks as if he decided to call the TRC’s bluff by refusing to
bend the knee.
But any such deal must have a cut-off point and those outside the
magic circle stand to become the scapegoats. Hence, the present
denouement. General van der Merwe either felt solidarity with the
policemen who carried out the Cosatu and Khotso House bombings and
wished to protect them — or feared they would point the finger at him.
So he confessed and sought amnesty — pointing the finger in turn at his
political superior, Vlok. This forced Vlok to seek amnesty, confess and
point the finger at P.W. Botha.
General Coetzee, too, presumably belongs within the magic circle that
is not to be pursued too vigorously for their crimes since he can
implicate everyone right up to the former state president. This leaves
Williamson, de Kock et al set up to carry the can for everything. Not
unnaturally they are reluctant to do so when they can see their
superiors getting clean away.
On the ANC side the situation is much easier. The 37 ANC leaders so
mysteriously given collective amnesty have never yet come forward to
explain what they needed amnesty for - and the chances of their ever
doing so seem to recede all the time. Not even lower level MK
operatives have been held responsible for any of their atrocities (the
ANC still officially regards Robert McBride’s bombing of Magoo’s bar as
an act of heroism), so there is no pressure to point a finger at anyone
higher up.
Clearly, another part of the deal was to declare crimes committed
beyond South Africa’s borders off-limits for TRC investigation. This
has let off both the senior ANC military accused of torture and murder
in the guerrilla camps in Angola, and the government top brass who
carried out cross-border raids and waged a vicious war in Namibia. The
TRC has steered well clear of all this explosive material (though it
happily ignored the cross-border boundaries when it wanted to
investigate the death of the Mozambican president, Samora Machel, the
Helderberg plane crash over the Indian Ocean). But the grisly details
of what happened in Joe Modise’s Quatro or Magnus Malan’s Namibia, and
who exactly was responsible for what, will never be revealed.