DECISION
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The applicant are Petrus Johannes Rudolph (hereinafter referred to as the first applicant) and Eugene Ney Terre Blanche, (hereinafter referred to as second applicant).
Both applicants apply for amnesty  in respect of various acts of public  violence committed in Ventersdorp on the 9th  of August  1991 when the erstwhile State President, Mr FW de Klerk, endeavoured to hold a meeting in Ventersdorp which meeting  was not  open to certain members of the public including  the two applicants and other members of the Afrikaner  Weerstandsbeweging, the AWB. 
First applicant, at the time, was the secretary-general of the AWB and the second applicant was, and still is, the leader. Both applicants  were later convicted on charges of public  violence.
In addition to the above, the second applicant applies for amnesty in respect of the "tarring and feathering" of Prof F. van Jaarsveld  on the 28 th of March 1979 at the  University  of South Africa  in Pretoria,  following  which the second applicant was convicted of crimen injuria and malicious injury to property. 
He also applies for amnesty in respect to the illegal possession of firearms and ammunition for which offence he was convicted and sentenced  in 1983. 
We shall deal with the above incidents separately and in  chronological order.
1.
THE TARRING AND FEATHERING OF PROF F VAN : JAARSVELD
The victim, the late Prof F. Van Jaarsveld, was a leading Professor of history attached to the University of Pretoria. 
On the  evening  of the incident  he held  a lecture  in a hall of the University  of SA proposing  a  different approach to the  celebration of the Day of the Covenant, a day held sacrosanct by the majority  of  Afrikaners, and which commemorated the battle of Blood River where a small group of Voortrekkers staved off the attack of a large number of Zulu warriors. 
The second applicant  and his followers, all members of the AWB, viewed this as an abuse by Prof  F van Jaarsveld of his  influential position in an attempt to further, in their view, leftist political objectives and which they further viewed as an attack on the  ultimate freedom of the  "Afrikanervolk." 
They  regarded the new direction given by  van Jaarsveld  to Afrikaner history  as contrary to the Constitution of the time which recognised God as the highest authority. The AWB then took  a decision to "tar and feather"  Prof Van Jaarsveld at the time of the lecture. This  they  did, pouring  tar over him in front of his audience and thereafter strewing feathers all over his clothes and  body. 
In the course of all this, expensive carpets  in the university hall were  damaged. 
The application was not formally opposed by the members of  the late  Prof van Jaarsveld but one of his sons, on behalf of the family, read out a statement at the hearing, explaining the effect that the incident had had on Prof van Jaarsveld and his family. 
The second applicant, who in his written application, fully disclosed  the names of his  co-perpetrators, testified  at the hearing that it was the intention of  the AWB to send out a message  to Prof van Jaarsveld that the vow of the Afrikaners, taken at Blood River, had been broken by him. The lecture by  van Jaarsveld, according to him was part of a clever political move, a typical onslaught on "my God and my people who thereafter  could  not  ask God  for victory." 
He claimed in his testimony  that after  the tarring and feathering, history books  written  by the Professor had been withdrawn from schools and thus they had partly succeeded in their political objective since he could no longer influence the minds of the youth, the voters of the future.  
After having considered  the documentation placed before it and the testimony of the applicant, the Committee is satisfied that the acts committed were acts by the applicant and members of the 
AWB, a political  organisation, in the course of the political struggle  of the past and in furtherance of the political objectives of that organisation. 
The Committee is also satisfied that the second applicant has made  a full disclosure of all the material facts as  required by the Act. 
It was suggested by the evidence leader, in argument, that  the incident was a result of differences in a religious dispute and thus falls outside  the ambit of the Promotion of National  Unity and Reconciliation Act, 334 of 1995. The Committee considered this argument but is of the view that the applicant's argument that his total  political  conviction is driven  by his education and belief in God must  be accepted.   In the case of the applicant, and the AWB,  religion cannot be divorced from their politics. 
Accordingly amnesty is GRANTED to the second applicant in respect of the above incident as set out on page 5 below. 
2.
ILLEGAL POSSESSION OF FIREARMS AND : AMMUNITION
Although the above matter could have been dealt with in chambers the Committee nevertheless deemed it expedient to hear 
the evidence of the second applicant in this regard. 
The second applicant testified  that the weapons which included a number of AK 47's and two pistols were obtained by his organisation. The weapons were obtained from Mr. Kees Mouse whom the second  applicant later established to have been an agent of the South African Police. The weapons were to be stored and kept until such time that the members of the AWB needed to protect themselves. The AWB feared that the erstwhile government would hand over power to a black government and that the same fate would befall South Africa as had befallen  other African countries where chaos had followed political change.
It was  eventually decided to bury the weapons on the farm of the second applicant's brother  until such time as the weapons would be needed.  The weapons were later seized by the police and the applicant was arrested and convicted.
In this matter too, the Committee is satisfied, after consideration of the documentation and the evidence given by the second applicant, that the applicant has complied with all the  requirements  of the Act, that the offence  was committed with a political  objective as required by the Act and full disclosure  had been made of all  material facts. 
Accordingly  the Committee  finds the second applicant also QUALIFIES for amnesty in respect of this incident as set on pg. 5 below.
3. THE VENTERSDORP INCIDENT
The applicants in their testimony did not admit to personal involvement in all the various actions which took place during the public  violence . They did, however, testify that they were both  key figures, the  first applicant  as the  secretary- general of the AWB and the second applicant  as the  leader.  Both  averred that the former State President  and the members  of the security forces who were charged with keeping of the law and order at that time of the incident were the proximate cause of the ensuing  violence and they  applied for the Committee to subpoena  Mr de Klerk as a witness.  The application was refused on the basis  that the Committee did not regard  Mr de Klerk as a necessary  or essential witness to enable the Committee to arrive at a decision. 
The Committee also did not deem  it necessary  to make a finding as to what had been proximate cause of  the public violence. All the Committee needs to consider is whether the applicants comply  with the formal requirements of the Act, whether the acts were committed  with a political objective as required by the Act and whether  the applicants  had made a full disclosure of all relevant  facts in regard to their participation.
Although the applicants  do not  admit  to having  personally participated  in all the individual acts which  formed part of the  public violence there was nothing to gainsay  their evidence  in regard  to their  individual  participation. 
The first applicant testified that the present meeting, prior to the incident, during which a decision was taken that licensed weapons would be carried when members of the AWB marched to the meeting, he was in the forefront of the procession together with the second applicant and was arrested before the major part of the fracas in which the AWB and the police were involved, took place. During this fracas a number of people were killed and injured. The first applicant himself sustained  minor injuries.
The first applicant testified that he was fully aware of the high political tension that prevailed and that he foresaw that conflict  would arise from their actions  which they regard as the  exercise  of their  democratic right.   They were intent on conveying  their political sentiments to the leaders of the Government of the time. 
The second applicant  likewise  testified  that he appreciated and knew of the high political  tension and foresaw the possibility of conflict. He  and his followers regarded  the Government at the time as a weak one, a  Government without principle  to whom  they  could  not trust the governance of the country. He and his organisation were in favour of a Volkstaat for the Afrikaner and were prepared  to fight for it even outside the law. 
The Committee considered the evidence of the two applicants and all the relevant documentation and is satisfied that the acts  committed  with a political objective in the course of the political  struggle of the time and the applicants had made a full and proper disclosure of their role in the incident. 
The committee accordingly  finds  that amnesty  should be GRANTED to the applicants I in respect of all the incidents dealt with above, in the following terms.
1.  Amnesty is GRANTED to the first applicant for the offence  of public violence committed  in Ventersdorp on the 9 th  August 1991.
2. Amnesty is GRANTED to the second applicant in respect of  the following offences:
 2.1 the act of crimen injuria  committed against  Prof F. Van Jaarsveld in  Pretoria on 28 th  March 1979;
 2.2 malicious injury to property belonging to the  University of South Africa caused in Pretoria  on 28 th  March 1979;
 2.3 illegal possession of arms and ammunition in or  near Ventersdorp in or about 1982;
 2.4 public violence committed in Ventersdorp on  the 9 th of August 1991
Signed at ................... on the ......... day of ................... 1999.
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JUDGE  S. MILLER
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ADV. N.SANDI