DECISION
INCIDENT 1: The first 5 Applicants apply for amnesty for   the abduction, assault and killing of Sipho Stanley Bhila near Durban on 22   February 1987.
INCIDENT 2: The 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, 10th and 11th Applicants   apply for amnesty for the abduction from Swaziland and killing at Elandskop   of Phila Portia Ndwandwe, also known as MK Zandile, towards the end of October   1988.
INCIDENT 3: The 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th and 9th Applicants   apply for amnesty for the abduction, assault and killing of Phumezo Nxiweni   at Durban on 4 and 5 November 1988.
INCIDENT 4: The 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th and 8th Applicants apply   for amnesty for the abduction, assault and killing of Sibusiso Ndlovu, Amanzi   Vilakazi and Elias Gift Matjale and the disposal of their bodies by explosives   at Durban on 18 November 1988.
The 4th Applicant, who had passed away prior to the hearing   being held, and the 10th Applicant, who at the time of the hearing was overseas,   did not testify at the hearing.  All the other Applicants gave oral testimony.
At all times relevant to the acts for which the applicants   apply for amnesty, the 1st, 2nd and 3rd Applicants were members of a unit of   Vlakplaas working with the Durban Security Branch of the South African Police   under the command of the 4th Applicant who held the rank of captain and was   at the head of C-section.  The 5th Applicant was a warrant officer at the Durban   Security Branch, also falling under the command of the 4th Applicant.  The 6th   Applicant was a colonel and overall commander of the Durban Security Branch.    The 7th Applicant was a major and head of the intelligence unit, C-section,   reporting to the 4th and 6th Applicants.  The 8th and 9th and 10th Applicants   were respectively a major and sergeants in the unit.  The 11th Applicant was   a colonel and the head of the Midlands Security Branch, stationed at Pietermaritzburg.
The evidence, which is common   cause among the Applicants, can be briefly summarised as follows:
At all relevant times, Natal and particularly the Durban   area, was a hot spot of political violence.  Act of terror and sabotage were   the order of the day.  The ANC carried out various military operations and its   strategy was to infiltrate MK cadres into the area which compromised the internal   security and which was the duty of policemen, more specifically the Security   Branch's, to maintain.  Organisations aligned to the ANC worked to promote civil   disobedience and anarchy.  The aim of the ANC was to render the country ungovernable.    Policing in general became increasingly difficult as so-called "no-go areas"   were created.  Policemen became "legitimate targets", they themselves   becoming targets for assassination when policing the townships.  All this happened   while a state of emergency was in force.  The state of emergency was proclaimed   on 21 July 1985 and only lifted on 18 October 1990 in Natal, some four months   after it had ended in the rest of the country.  The pressure derived from their   superiors and from politicians' public utterances increased.  They were to turn   the tide and normalise the situation.  They were not to allow an ANC/SACP government   taking control.  They had to combat the struggle at all costs.
In 1986 it was discovered that the ANC had established an   Area Political Military Committee (APMC) in Natal that committed a number of   acts of violence, terror and sabotage in Natal.  The unit, under the command   of the 7th Applicant, successfully uncovered their operation, conducted under   the code name Operation Butterfly.  54 persons were arrested on the 23rd December   1986.  A number of them made statements to the police in terms of Section 29   of the Internal Security Act and were released, some of them to be used as State   witnesses.  12 persons were charged in State vs Buthelezi and 11 others, Case   No. CC70/86.  This was later to become known as the Ramlakan Case.  9 of the   12 accused were convicted.  Because of a lack of evidence, resulting from a   last minute refusal of the State witness, Lulamile Khate to testify, three of   the accused were discharged.  These included Sipho Stanley Bhila, the victim   of the first incident and Phumezo Nxiweni, the victim of the third incident.    Phila Portia Ndwandwe was among the 54 originally arrested but released after   having made a statement, to be called as a State witness and listed number 38   in a list of 72 witnesses.  She, however, left the country and did not testify.    The three of them were all involved in Operation Butterfly.
INCIDENT 1
Sipho Stanley Bhila (Bhila) was acquitted in the Ramlakan   Case on 18th February 1987.  Apart from being involved in Operation Butterfly,   he was also suspected to have been involved in the Amanzimtoti bombing with   Andrew Zondo.
The first three Applicants arrived in Durban as part of   a unit from Vlakplaas under command of the 1st Applicant on 10th February 1987   and reported for their deployment with the 4th Applicant.  On about the 20th   February the 1st Applicant was briefed by the 4th Applicant that Bhila, who   despite his activities, had been acquitted on all charges because of a lack   of evidence, was to be abducted and killed.  He was told by the 4th Applicant   that it was in the interest of the safety of the State as there was no other   way to stop him from carrying on with his activities.
The 1st Applicant instructed an askari from Vlakplaas, Ernest   Ramatala, who worked under his command, to contact Bhila, pretending to be a   member of MK and tell him that the ANC wanted him to leave the country.  The   meeting was arranged and on 22 February 1987 Bhila was intercepted near Lamontville   by the 1st, 2nd and 3rd Applicants.  He was taken first to an old railway shooting   range at Winkelspruit and in the evening taken in a vehicle by the 1st, 2nd,   3rd, 4th and 5th Applicants and one Michael Lembede, who was also a member of   the Durban Security Branch and who was later killed in a shoot-out with MK members,   all of them under the orders and command of the 4th Applicant, to a deserted   place off the Umbumbulo road at the edge of a steep cliff, whereupon he was   killed by the 1st and 2nd Applicants firing shots into the back of his head   and his body thrown down the cliff.  The weapons that they fired with, .25 Baby   Browning pistols, were not authorised issue, they possessed them illegally.    He was never interrogated nor assaulted during the operation.  The objective   was simply to kill him and dispose of his body.
Ernest Ramatala was called as a witness by the leader of   evidence.  His evidence, although deviating on non-material aspects, corroborated   the evidence of the Applicants.  There were also a number of contradictions   and discrepancies in the evidence of the Applicants, all of which are not material   and can be ascribed to the lapse of time, resulting in loss of memory and faulty   constructions.
The Committee is satisfied that   the incident occurred within the context of the conflicts of the past, that   the acts of the Applicants were associated with a political objective and that   they have made a full disclosure of all material and relevant facts.
They are accordingly GRANTED amnesty for the abduction of   Sipho Stanley Bhila who in the opinion of the Committee is a victim as envisaged   by the Act.  His particulars and those of his next-of-kin are being referred   to the Reparations and Rehabilitation Committee for its consideration.
INCIDENT 2
Phila Portia Ndwandwe (Ndwandwe) after her arrest, statement   and release, left the country during 1986 and according to information received   military training in Angola.  She then went to Swaziland where she soon became   MK Commander for Natal operations.  The Durban Security Branch continued to   receive regular reports about her activities from informers placed in Swaziland.    The terrorist activities continued under her command in the area of Port Natal   and during October 1988 the 6th, 4th and 7th Applicants decided that she had   to be neutralised and killed.  If, however, she could be persuaded to turn and   work with the Security Branch, she could be of immense value to them.  It was   therefore decided to first abduct her from Swaziland in an effort to recruit   her, failing which she would be killed.
A plan was devised and put into operation.  The 11th Applicant,   who commanded the Midlands Intelligence desk, was ordered by the 6th Applicant   to participate.  The application of the 10th Applicant is based on his servicing   and preparing one of the vehicles to be used by the other Applicants in the   operation, full knowing that it was to be used for the abduction.  The 4th,   6th, 7th and 11th Applicants travelled together in the 4th Applicant's vehicle   (Taylor's car) from Durban to Onverwacht border post where the 6th Applicant   remained at a vacant police house while the other three crossed into Swaziland,   using false passports.
The 5th and 8th Applicants travelled, with two informers   that knew Ndwandwe, in a Toyota minibus (the Kombi) and an Isuzu bakkie (the   bakkie).  All the vehicles were fitted with false number plates.  They too travelled   to Onverwacht where the two informers "jumped the fence" (illegally   crossed the border).  The 5th and 8th Applicants crossed at the border post   and in Swaziland met up with the informers who on their own travelled in the   bakkie to meet with Ndwandwe.  At the George Hotel in Manzini the informers,   waiting in the bakkie, were approached by Ndwandwe.  She got into the bakkie   with them and they drove from Manzini towards the Sipho Fanene turn off where   the Kombi was waiting.  Ndwandwe was transferred, without any force being used,   to the Kombi.  In the meantime, the 4th, 6th, 7th and 11th Applicants were observing   all of this from Taylor's car, being in radio contact with the Kombi.  Ndwandwe's   hands were tied with masking tape and the 7th Applicant also got into the Kombi   with Ndwandwe.  They all drove to Sipho Fanene, to Big Ben, to Ntoko and towards   Lavumisa and then towards Hlubi where they again transferred Ndwandwe.  The   5th and 8th Applicants took over the bakkie and the 7th Applicant and Ndwandwe   got onto the back of the bakkie, partially covering themselves as it had just   begun to rain.  While the other vehicles and Applicants, with the informers,   crossed the border at Golela, the bakkie proceeded to Onverwacht.  Close to   the border post the 7th Applicant and Ndwandwe illegally crossed through the   border fence where they were met by the others.  From there they travelled to   the police house where the 6th Applicant had been waiting for them.  The purpose   of his waiting there having been to be able to react should anything go wrong.    As it was, everything went like clockwork.  It was too late for the 5th and   8th Applicants to return as the border post had already been closed.  They only   joined them the next morning early.  That same evening of their arrival at the   police house, the 7th Applicant started to interrogate Ndwandwe with a view   to recruiting her.  At first she was reluctant to respond to questioning.  She   was treated nicely, was never assaulted and later began to respond, confirming   information known to them and providing some information that was new to them.    She inter alia told them that the Pinetown Post Office limpet mine explosion   of the 12th of August, as well as a number of other incidents, had been the   work of units under the command of Phumezo Nxiweni (Incident 3).  As the main   purpose of the interrogation was Ndwandwe's recruitment, the 7th Applicant particularly   searched for signs that she might co-operate as an informer.  She was made a   direct offer to become an informer.  None of the signs he was looking for was   forthcoming, not in her body language, nor in her communication.  She did not   raise the issue of her safety.  She did not ask who else would know of it or   how communications would work.
The next morning they travelled to a safe house on a farm   Elandskop near Pietermaritizburg of which the 11th Applicant had use.  Both   on the way there and at Elandskop the 7th Applicant continued with his questioning   of Ndwandwe.  Although she continued to co-operate, none of the signs that she   may work with them was forthcoming.  It became clear that she would not be turned,   certainly not without some delay which would render it impossible to replace   her in Swaziland without her finding it impossible to explain her absence and   whereabouts over a longer period of time.  It was never their intention that   Ndwandwe would be charged and prosecuted.  They could in any event not prosecute   following an abduction from Swaziland.  On the other hand there was no way in   which she could be released to continue her activities.  In addition, not only   would the two informers; safety now be compromised, but the exposure of the   whole informer network would be at risk.  The 7th Applicant returned to Durban,   leaving Ndwandwe in the custody of the 4th Applicant and taking the two informers   with him.  The latter were in no way involved with Ndwandwe other than as described   above.
During the further course of the day Ndwandwe was interrogated   by two members of the Eastern Transvaal Security Branch, they having been advised   by the 4th Applicant that she was in his custody.  The 6th Applicant personally   then interrogated Ndwandwe to satisfy himself that she could not be turned.    She told him that she would not co-operate with them and specifically stated   that she would continue her activities should she be released.  He then gave   the 4th, 5th, 8th and 11th Applicants the order to eliminate her and left.
The 5th and 8th Applicants then dug a grave while the 4th   and 11th Applicants remained with Ndwandwe, the 4th Applicant communicating   with her in Zulu.  The 5th and 8th Applicants returned to the house.  They told   Ndwandwe that she was again to be transferred somewhere else.  She was blindfolded   and led to the grave some fifty to eighty metres from the house among high trees.    The 5th Applicant hit her on the head with a baton which rendered her unconscious.    He then shot her in the head.  She was derobed and placed in the grave.  Lime   was sprinkled over the body which was then covered with plastic bags and the   grave filled with soil.
Contradictions and inconsistencies in the evidence of the   Applicants were not material and can be ascribed to the lapse of time and resulting   loss of memory or faulty constructions.  In the case of the 4th Applicant, evidence   was adduced to the effect that he had suffered from memory losses at the time   of his completing his application for amnesty flowing from the advanced stage   of cancer of the brain which soon thereafter ended in his death.
In our opinion, the only issue that was seriously pursued   by the lawyers of the family of Ndwandwe and by the Committee's Evidence Leader   was the failure and refusal of the Applicants, more specifically the 7th Applicant   to disclose the names of the informers with whom Ndwandwe got into the bakkie   at the George Hotel in Manzini.  They conceded that it was in fact trite law   that the identity of informers, as a general rule, ought to be protected.  In   the present instance however, it was argued that they were in effect co-perpetrators   of the Applicants in that they had lured Ndwandwe into the vehicle under some   false pretext and by prior agreement effectively handed her over to the Applicants   at least full knowing that she was to be abducted.  As co-perpetrators they   are therefore not informers in the classic sense of the word.  The Committee   was asked to rule that the Applicants were obliged to disclose the names of   these informers and should they refuse to disclose that amnesty be refused for   their failure to do so.  The Applicants argued that even if under the circumstances   the informers were regarded by the Committee to have been co-perpetrators in   the abduction, they would still be entitled to the protection of their identity   as informers.  One of the main considerations for the protection of the identity   of informers, is the regard for their personal safety.  In the present circumstances   they claimed that the personal safety of the informers and even their lives   were at stake.  Should the Committee rule that they had to disclose their names   they would still refuse rather risking the refusal of amnesty.
The Committee did not make a ruling.  It was agreed that   the 7th Applicant would approach the informers and enquire as to whether they   would be prepared to, of their own accord, disclose their identities.  The hearing   was postponed.  The Committee was subsequently informed that the informers expected   of the Applicants to under no circumstances disclose their identities and that   they would under no circumstances join the process.
The Committee has therefore to   decide whether the failure to disclose the names of the informers places the   Applicants in breach of their obligation to make "a full disclosure of   all relevant facts" as envisaged by Section 20(1)(c) of the Act on the   Promotion of National Unity and Reconciliation, Act 34 of 1995 (the Act).
The Committee firstly considered whether the informers in   the present instance were to be regarded as co-perpetrators.  Now it has to   be said that in every instance where the identity of an informer is an issue,   such an informer must have by definition contributed to the eventual outcome   of the incident.  Such information could relate to the activities of a person,   to her whereabouts and even to presence at a specific place at a specific time.    It could certainly entail the pointing out of a person to a policeman who may   there and then apprehend the person so pointed out.
In the present instance it is common cause that the informers   to the 7th Applicant for approximately a year prior to the abduction of Ndwandwe.    They had been giving information to the 7th Applicant on a wide range of issues   and persons not related to Ndwandwe's person or her activities.  The Committee   is mindful that on the evidence before the Committee, corroborated by documents   introduced by the leader of evidence, the informers, other that leading Ndwandwe   directly into the trap set by the Applicants played no active role nor even   physically restrained Ndwandwe.  On the facts of evidence before the Committee   it is tantamount to a situation where the services of an informer would be made   use of to arrange an appointment between herself and another person, where the   other person is than apprehended at the meeting point.  This was indeed exactly   what happened in the case of Phumezo Nxiweni, which is the third incident where   the Applicants apply for amnesty, dealt with hereunder.  The Committee therefore   finds that in the present circumstances the informers would still be entitled   to the protection of their identities as informers.
The Committee, in addition id not see its way open to rule   for the disclosure of the identity of the informers on the basis of the fear   for their lives expressed by the Applicants.  The Committee is therefore loathe   to find that the Applicants should have disclosed their identities and that   their failure to disclose would warrant a refusal of amnesty.
The Committee also considered the matter in the second place   from the question of the meaning of the concept of "all relevant facts".    The Committee, like all other Committees of the Amnesty Committee, interprets   the concept to refer to all material facts related to the incident.  It was   argued that the disclosure of the identity of co-perpetrators of Applicants   was sine qua non for amnesty to be granted.  This, in our opinion, is clearly   wrong.  Were this to be the interpretation, the legislature would, in our opinion,   have explicitly so enacted.  What is relevant to an application is by definition   what the Committee decides to be relevant in each particular situation, having   regard to all the evidence.  Therefore, what is material is by definition what   the Committee, having regard to all the evidence in a particular application,   deems to be material.  In the present instance, the Applicants have all made   a full and truthful disclosure of the smallest of detail related to the incident.    They have described fully how the informers accompanied them to Manzini, how   they waited at the George Hotel, how Ndwandwe got into the bakkie with them   and exactly how they drove to the meeting point where she was transferred to   the Kombi when their participation ceased.  The Committee does not need the   names of the informers to enhance the picture or add information necessary for   the Committee to decide whether the Applicants would qualify for amnesty.  Although   the Committee understands the basic and human need of the family of Ndwandwe   to know the identity of those whose collaboration lead to her abduction and   killing, the Committee is of the opinion that the identity of the informers   is not material to its coming to a finding and therefore, under these circumstances,   not a relevant fact as envisaged in the Act.
The Committee is satisfied that the Applicants have all   made a full disclosure of their acts related to the incident which occurred   within the context of the conflicts of the past and that these acts were associated   with a political objective as envisaged in the Act.  They are accordingly all   GRANTED amnesty for their acts as described above in their various roles in   the incident related to the abduction and killing of Ndwandwe, including their   illegal use and possession of false passports, the illegal crossing of the border   and re-entry and the illegal possession of firearms and ammunition.
The Committee is further of the   opinion that Phila Portia Ndwandwe is a victim as envisaged in the Act and her   name and the particulars of her next-of-kin is being forwarded to the Reparations   and Rehabilitation Committee for its consideration.
INCIDENT 3
Phumezo Nxiweni (Nxiweni) was, as stated above, one of the   accused in the Ramlakan case who was acquitted because of the failure of Khate   to testify.  According to the Applicants, Nxiweni was indeed involved in all   the incidents listed on the charge sheet against him.  After his release he   continued with his involvement in a number of MK-units in the KwaMashu area,   a number of them being under his direct control.  These included the KwaMashu   unit, established after the Ramlakan case.  Evidence was adduced concerning   a number of incidents for which Nxiweni, according to the informer network,   was directly involved.  As was stated above under Incident 2, Ndwandwe also   gave or confirmed information relating to the activities of Nxiweni.  At the   time of the present incident he was living in the Allan Taylor residence.  It   was decided that Nxiweni should also be eliminated to stem the acts of sabotage   and terror that he co-ordinated.
In the beginning of November 1988 an informer made contact   with Nxiweni.  An appointment was made by the informer to speak to Nxiweni.    Nxiweni honoured the appointment which was on the 4th November 1988 at King's   Park Stadium in Durban.  He was there abducted by the 7th, 8th and 9th Applicants   and taken to a safe house at Verulam where he was intermittently interrogated   and assaulted by all three of them.  During the interrogation he supplied information   about an explosion that was carried out the previous night at the Rossburgh   Station by the KwaMashu 3 (Incident 4).  He furthermore told them that on that   same evening, that is the 4th November 1988, another explosion was to occur   on the railway line at Montclair.  The 8th and 9th Applicants drove to the place.    On their way there they received a report that the explosion had just taken   place and on their arrival they saw that a bomb had indeed exploded on the railway   line.  The police were already on the scene.  Nxiweni was held at the safe house   overnight and the following day.  In the late afternoon the 4th and 5th Applicants   returned having been away on other work and called at the safe house.  The interrogation   continued.  Nxiweni, inter alia, provided information about an arms cache in   a storeroom at the Allan Taylor residence.  The 5th, 7th and 8th Applicants   broke into the storeroom and retrieved a trunk full of arms and ammunition,   including limpet mines, mini-limpet mines and detonators, which they took to   the safe house.  The 7th Applicant briefed the 4th Applicant about the abduction   and interrogation and his intention to kill Nxiweni as the only way to stop   him from continuing with his activities.  The 4th Applicant agreed, having been   aware of Nxiweni's activities, also having heard the information about Nxiweni   shortly before from Ndwandwe (Incident 2).
The 4th Applicant then took control.  He ordered the 7th   and 9th Applicants to leave and the 5th and 8th Applicants to kill Nxiweni.    The 4th Applicant himself dug a grave.  Nxiweni was then blindfolded, told that   he was to be transferred to another place, lead to the grave and shot by the   8th Applicant in the back of the head with a Scorpion pistol, fitted with a   silencer, which pistol was also unauthorised issue.  His clothes were removed,   his body placed in the grave, lime sprinkled over his body and the grave filled   with soil.
The incident was later reported   to the 6th Applicant who explicitly approved of their actions after the event.
In cross-examination it was suggested that Nxiweni, after   his acquittal in the Ramlakan case, became inoperative and that the killing   was an act of spite following the acquittal.  No evidence, however, was led   to substantiate these suggestions.  No request was made for the disclosure of   the identity of the informer.
There were inconsistencies in the evidence of the Applicants   which can all be ascribed to memory loss resulting from the lapse of time.    In the case of the 4th Applicant it appears that in disclosing his role in his   written application, he, in his construction, places himself in situations where   all the other Applicants deny his involvement, such as when they went to the   Allan Taylor residence.  The Committee, having regard to the evidence about   the state of mind of the 4th Applicant due to his illness, is satisfied that   on the evidence before it, the Applicants have all made a full and truthful   disclosure, that the incidents occurred within the context of the conflicts   of the past and that their acts were associated with a political objective as   envisaged in the Act.  They are accordingly all GRANTED amnesty for their various   roles in the incident as applied for.  The Committee is further of the opinion   that Phumezo Nxiweni is a victim as envisaged in the Act and his name and the   particulars of his next-of-kin are being referred to the Reparations and Rehabilitation   Committee for its consideration.
INCIDENT 4
After the events described in the Incident 3, the attention   of the Security Branch focused on the MK unit of KwaMashu.  An informer was   tasked to infiltrate the unit in order to acquire information on the identity   of the members of the unit, its logistics and infrastructure.  The informer   succeeded and he kept the 7th Applicant abreast of discussions in the unit and   of planned operations.  On the 18th November 1988 he reported that the unit   was to effect an explosion on the railway line at Phoenix.  It was arranged   that he would lead the members of the unit to the Avoca Bridge where the 7th,   8th and 9th Applicants would be waiting to "arrest" them.  Although   they were expecting four members of the unit, only three arrived in the company   of the informer.  They were duly apprehended and taken to the safe house at   Verulam where the 4th Applicant had been waiting for them.  The three members   of the unit apprehended were Sibusiso Ndlovu, Amanzi Vilakazi and Elias Gift   Matjale.  The fourth person they were expecting was a person named Naya Ngema.
When apprehended, they were found in possession of three   SPM limpet mines with detonators held in a bag.  They were assaulted and questioned   about the origin of the limpet mines.  They fabricated a story to conceal the   true facts known to the 7th Applicant through the informer.  In view of their   refusal to admit to the true facts and against the background of a series of   incidents in the recent past, perpetrated by their unit and other units, it   was not seriously entertained that they could be recruited.  The 4th and 7th   Applicants decided that they had to be killed.  It was decided that they would   be killed and their bodies destroyed by the use of explosives.
They were taken in a minibus to the railway line near Phoenix   by the 4th, 5th, 7th and 8th Applicants.  They arrived at the railway line.    The 4th Applicant remained in the minibus while the other three Applicants walked   with Ndlovu, Vilakazi and Matjale to the railway line.  They were told to kneel   down.  Each one was shot with a Scorpion pistol in the back of the head, each   of them by one of the three Applicants.  Their bodies were placed in a star   formation with their heads and hands together, the limpet mines placed in the   centre and detonated.
They reported to the 6th Applicant who approved of their   actions and associated himself therewith.  The incident was listed as an explosion   by members of MK who had died in execution of the explosion.  It was thus a   so-called false flag operation.
In cross-examination it was suggested that the KwaMashu   unit was under command of Naya Ngema and not of Nxiweni.  This was denied by   the Applicants.  No evidence was led on behalf of the families of Ndlovu, Vilakazi   and Matjale.
Again there were some inconsistencies in the evidence of   the Applicants and that of the 4th Applicant in his written application.  Again   all can be ascribed to loss of memory and faulty constructions.
The Committee is satisfied that this incident was part of   a chain of events that occurred within the context of the conflicts of the past,   the acts of the Applicants associated with a political objective and that they   have all made a full disclosure of all relevant facts as envisaged by the Act.    They are accordingly all GRANTED amnesty.
The Committee is further of the   opinion that Sibusiso Ndlovu, Amanzi Vilakazi and Elias Gift Matjale are all   victims as envisaged in the Act and their names and particulars of their next-of-kin   are being forwarded to the Reparations and Rehabilitation Committee for its   consideration.
SIGNED AT CAPE TOWN THIS THE       DAY OF         2001
JUDGE A WILSON
ADV. S SIGODI
MR W MALAN
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