DECISION
1.    INTRODUCTION
This is an application in terms of Section 18 of the Promotion   of National Unity and Reconciliation Act No 34 of 1995.  The applications mainly   relate to the following incidents:-
1.1   Arson in respect of the bombing of houses belonging   to David Modimeng, to Leonard Brown and Sello Ramakobye; and
1.2   The murder of Joyce Modimeng.  All the offences were   carried out in Oukasie, Brits during or about 1986.
At the hearing before the proceedings   commenced the Committee was advised that Johannes Jacobus Victor had withdrawn   his application for amnesty in respect of the present incident.
2.    THE POLITICAL CONTEXT
The first witness to testify was Machiel Andries Pretorius   who testified that the attacks on the house of Leonard Brown and of Sello Ramakobye   were carried out in the same evening, viz round about May 1986.  He states that   the attack on the house of David Modimeng occurred a few days later, round about   the 27 May 1986.  At the relevant time Pretorius was a member of the South African   Security Police at the sub-branch of Brits where he worked under the command   of Robert Leslie Jubber.  Jubber fell under the jurisdiction of the Northern   Transvaal (NTVL) Security Branch.  ?At the time the nearby black township, Oukasie,   was being troubled by political unrest and resistance to the exercise of authority   by the National Party government of which all the applications were loyal and   dedicated supporters.  They saw it as their duty to protect the government and   defend it against what they saw as a revolutionary  onslaught.  In some part   of the country life was also characterised by unrest and violence; consumer   boycotts; class boycotts; worker stayaways and many kinds of campaigns to oppose   what the residents of Oukasie saw as a forced removal to Lethlabile.  The application   further testified that at the time because the Oukasie black township had no   infrastructure, the government of the day had decided that the community should   be removed to Lethlabile where better social facilities existed.  The residents   opposed the removal under the banner of the Brits Action Committee ("the   BAC").  The result was that the whole matter was so highly politicised   that it was no longer a matter of "a responsible government" trying   to improve the socio-economic conditions in which the Oukasie black community   lived.  What further compounded matters was the fact that the Oukasie residents   generally supported the African National Congress ("the ANC") which   was banned at the time.  As the result of the BAC campaigns there was an economic   decline in the area and many factories closed down.  Pretorius says the situation   was so serious that within a period of two (2) years about twenty-four (24)   factories closed business and the industrialists concerned left the area.  The   surrounding black residential areas were also affected by the same levels of   unrest and violence.  Normal policing was impossible.  Intimidation of those   who did not support the BAC was the order of the day and these would be beaten   up;  their homes torched and they were subjected to all manner of threats.
On one particular morning the BAC called an open meeting   in the Catholic Church Hall.  This was the same hall where the BAC was formed   in a very emotionally and politically charged atmosphere.  On that day the issue   of the removal was discussed.  The applicant's opinion is that in the circumstances   it would have been better for the Oukasie residents to move to Lethlabile where   they would have been able to buy plots for about forty rand (R40,00) each and   would have had access to running water and other essential facilities.  At the   end of the meeting, youths who had also attended the gathering came out with   petrol bombs.  They attacked several places in the township.  Mr Rashinani was   the first person's property to be attacked with petrol bombs and stones.  The   latter's home, shop and vehicles were set alight.  There was total chaos in   the township.  Streets were barricaded and many government buildings, such as   the local authority administration offices were torched and destroyed.  Residents   who were known to have expressed a desire to move to Lethlabile were attacked.    A state of total anarchy and lawlessness prevailed for a considerable length   of time.  In the same context Pretorius' duties as a field worker was to deploy   informers in political organisations;  he evaluated and contrasted the different   reports which he received from his informers;  he intercepted correspondence   to and fro suspected enemies of the Government of the day;  he also personally   monitored the movements and activities of those who opposed the State.  There   were other members of the Security Police who operated with him in the same   way as him.  They shared and compared the information which they received from   their informers but not necessarily confiding to each other as to the identity   of sources.  All their reports found their way to the NTVL Security Branch Offices   where Brigadier Jack Cronje was the Commanding Officer.  Pretorius states that   he used to know Jacques Hechter very well and they worked together in Brits.    There was another nearby security branch local division, Bronkhorspruit.  Their   members and the Brits Police and a very close working relationship.
Pretorius testified that during the relevant time he used   to know Sello Ramakobye as a member of the National Automobile and Allied Workers   Union ("NAAWU") and a shop stewards' chairperson at the Firestone   Factory in Brits.  Firestone was constantly experiencing strikes and as a result   production was at a very low ebb.  This led to retrenchments and the rate of   unemployment increased rapidly.  These factors caused further instability and   the tide of violence continued unabated.  Ramakobye was an executive committee   member of the BAC and he wielded immense influence and political power in the   community in general.  The information which Pretorius received from his sources   was further that Ramakobye was involved in the acts of terror by the Oukasie   youths against those who did not comply with his orders.  Pretorius states that   the youth carried out orders from Leonard Brown who worked closely with Ramakobye   and the leadership of the BAC.  This information, Pretorius states, he forwarded   to this Commander Jubber, who in turn conveyed it to the NTVL Security Branch.    In his evidence-in-chief Pretorius states that according to his sources Leonard   Brown was a supporter of the ANC and its military wing, uMkhonto weSizwe ("MK").    He was allegedly involved in training the youths who blindly followed him.    He taught the youths how to make petrol bombs.
3.    THE BOMBING OF THE HOUSES OF SELLO RAMAHOBYE AND LEONARD   BROWN
On a certain day in 1986, Pretorius continues his evidence,   he was called by Jubber into his office.  He told him that that evening he was   to report in Pretoria to the NTVL Security Branch parking area where he would   be met by Lieutenant Jacques Hechter.  He told him not to tell any person about   the meeting.  He was to keep this a secret.  According to Jubber, he (Pretorius)   and Hechter were to execute certain "disruption actions" in Brits.    According to the order, Hechter would come and speak to him and he was simply   to follow him.  Pretorius did as he was instructed and on his arrival at the   place in question he was met by Hechter who was in the company of other people   whose identity he could not establish because it was dark.  They all climbed   into a police minibus and proceeded to Brits.  Then the applicant continues,   in Brits "Lieutenant hechter informed me that there were two homes in Oukasie   that I was to identify for them, namely the home of Sello Ramakobye and Leonard   Brown.  Upon our arrival at Oukasie, before we moved into Oukasie, all of us   donned balaclavas in order to render us unrecognisable.  Lieutenant Hechter   informed me that I was to identify Ramakobye's residence first and after that   the residence of Leonard Brown.  Sello Ramakobye's residence was situated at   the upper part of Oukasie and Leonard Brown's home was closer to the exit.    I identified Ramakobye's home to them.  We stopped, some of the persons climbed   out and I saw that they threw petrol bombs in the direction of Sello Ramakobye's   home.
MR ROUX:    Who climbed out, can you recall?
MR PRETORIUS:  No, I cannot recall who disembarked from   the vehicle.  The persons re-embarked into the minibus immediately and we drove   away.  We moved down into Oukasie.  At Leonard Brown's home we drove slower.    His home was situated on the left-hand side as one departed from Oukasie.  I   pointed out Leonard Brown's home to Lieutenant Hechter and I also identified   where Leonard Brown would be sleeping in the home according to relevant information.    We drove some distance past the house and then we stopped.  Lt Hechter and another   person disembarked from the vehicle.  I cannot recall the other person and they   moved back in the direction of Leonard Brown's home.  After a while they returned   speedily, they climbed back into the vehicle and we departed in haste.  Just   after we had departed, I heard a loud blow occurring behind me.  Upon this we   returned to Pretoria where my vehicle was.  I climbed back into my vehicle and   drove back to my home in Mooinooi, where I was residing at that stage.  The   following day at the office, I was informed by the other members that there   was a fire at Sello Ramakoybye's home and that there had been an explosion at   Leonard Brown's home.  As far as I know, nobody was injured or killed during   these incidents".
Pretorius says he was able to point out the homes of Ramakobye   and Brown because he knew Oukasie township very well.  This was where the police   spent most of their day and he also knew in general where activists resided   and, in particular, in which part of the houses they slept.  He was continuously   monitoring their movements and whereabouts.  His informants had told him that   in the house Brown shared the same room with his parents.  Pretorius knew the   interior of Leonard Brown's house very well.  He had once conducted a search   in the premises and secured some documents which intimated that Brown was possibly   collaborating with the MK in its infiltration of cadres into the area.  later   there was a violent conflict amongst the leaders of the BAC.  Some of them were   killed and it was widely suspected that they were being killed as the result   of the in-fighting.  It was at that stage that Leonard Brown was elected as   the new chairperson of the organisation and the old leadership was ousted.    Under  cross-examination Pretorius testified that although he did not throw   a bomb at the houses of Ramakobye's and the Brown's he fully associated himself   with the attacks.  He knew why the places were being attacked.  It was because   the occupants were known opponents of the Nationalist Party government and its   policies and it was not the first and certainly not the last time that such   attacks were carried out.  He states that in those days it was quite customary   for the Security Police members to intimidate activists by torching their houses   or even kill them if this was deemed necessary in the circumstances of a particular   case.  He states that they were never charged for the incident.
4.    THE BOMBING OF THE HOUSE OF DAVID MODIMENG AND THE   MURDER OF HIS WIFE JOYCE MODIMENG
Pretorius testified that according to his sources Modimeng   was not only a prominent trade unionist but he was also a high-profile figure   and participated in the affairs of the BAC.  His wife, Joyce Modimeng, also   took part in the BAC and she was a well-known figure in women's organisation   in Oukasie and the anti-removal campaigns.  There was also information that   David Modimeng frequently travelled to Swaziland and Lesotho where he consulted   with ANC members.  The ANC members were said to be using him to smuggle weapons   into the country.  These weapons would later land in the hands of MK cadres   who carried out military operations.  Then on or about the 26 or 27 May 1986,   Pretorius was again called by Jubber and the following is what happened:  
      "Once again he informed me that   on that evening disruptive actions would be executed from Northern Transvaal   and furthermore, he informed me that I should wait outside Brits on the Brits/Thabazimbi   Road at a certain point during that evening and that Lt Hechter would meet me   there.  I cannot recall the precise time that he told me but I performed the   orders as he told me  I parked my vehicle at the Brits Police Station and walked   to the point of rendezvous.  Shortly thereafter, the white Skyline vehicle of   Mr Hechter arrived.  At that stage I was aware that this was the State vehicle   that he used.  He stopped at the point where I was waiting and I climbed into   the Skyline vehicle, upon which Lt Hechter informed me.  As I embarked into   the vehicle, we immediately donned balaclavas and Lt Hechter informed me that   I had to identify David Modimeng's residence in Oukasie to them.  I assumed   that this would be another disruptive action, upon which I informed him that   it would be best advisable in terms of escape routes, that we follow the Canal   Road, as it was known in Brits.  It was the canal of the Hartebeespoort Dam   which ran through the Oukasie area.  We followed this road to a point where   I warned Lt Hechter that we were approaching Oukasie and we parked at the side   of the road.  We disembarked and I went ahead along with them until we were   opposite the residence in the street.  I pointed out to Lt Hechter that this   was the residence which was used by Mr Modimeng upon which I and another person   retreated to the corner where the Canal Road was.  We sat there at the side   of the road waiting for Hechter and his companions to return.  After a short   while, I cannot recall precisely how long, Lt Hechter and another person came   running past us in great haste and we returned with them to the vehicle, that   would be the white Nissan Skyline.  Upon our arrival at the vehicle, if I recall   correctly, just as we arrived there or just after we departed, I heard a tremendous   blow from the direction of Oukasie.  They then returned me via the same route   that I had identified where they had picked me up.  They dropped me off at that   same point.  I walked back, retried my vehicle and drove back to my residence   in Mooinooi.  The following morning upon my arrival at the office, I was informed   by my colleagues that there had been an explosion at the residence of David   Modimeng and that a person had died during the explosion, namely the spouse   of Mr Modimeng and that children had also been injured during this explosion".
According to Pretorius he knew where Modimeng lived;  which   room he occupied, viz the room to the right-hand side of the house.  He knew   why Modimeng and his wife were being attacked and associated himself with the   action that was being taken against them.  This is despite the fact that he   did not participate in the execution of the attack.  Neither had he seen what   exactly had happened.  He never told any person about the incident because it   was conducted on a need-to-know basis.  Earlier the legal representative for   the Modimeng family intimated that witnesses would be called to contradict Pretorius'   evidence that Modimeng acted as an arms courier for the ANC and that his wife   was a member of ANC Women's League.  This never happened and instead it was   suggested to Pretorius that Joyce was a housewife who had no interest in politics.    Pretorius was adamant that he had reliable information from his sources and   that he had cross-checked its veracity.
Robert Lesley Jubber who was present in the hearing room   during the time Du Plessis was rendering his testimony testified and confirmed   all the evidence insofar as it relates to him.  He states that he was told by   Brigadier Cronje that whenever a disruption was to occur in his division (Brits),   his members would be required to render the necessary assistance.  The instruction   was further that all actions would be carried out on a strictly secret basis   and no person other than those who were involved in the action was to know of   the occurrence of the incident.  He accepted this modus operandi and its objectives   and was always prepared to comply.  Jubber further confirms the evidence regarding   the manner in which information was circulated and the use of informers to infiltrate   organisations.  Ramakobye, Leonard Brown and the Modimengs were known to him   as prominent activists in the area.  On a certain day in or around May 1986   he received a telephone call from Hechter.  He told him that he and his men   were coming to his area that evening to carry out "disruption actions".    At that stage Hechter was a member of a task forum which was under the command   of Jacques Cronje.  He states that because Hechter was senior to him, he, being   a captain, and Hechter a lieutenant and the fact that he was based in the regional   head offices, he assumed that he was conveying to him an order from Cronje.    When Hechter spoke to him he also recalled the previous order by Cronje that   his members might be required to assist in the execution of actions in his area.    Hechter asked him to make a member available and he accordingly instructed Pretorius   to go and meet him.  Pretorius was chosen because although he did not hold a   commissioned rank at that stage, he was a very loyal, hardworking and reliable   member  Jubber further states that at the time he did not know the selected   targets and what kind of disruption actions were going to be carried out.  However,    he expected that the actions were going to be carried out.  However, he expected   that the actions were going to take place within his area of jurisdiction.    As he was a trained bomb demolition expert, after the targets' homes were bombed   he was called to the scene.  When he came there he was satisfied that the action   had been carried out by Hechter, Pretorius and others who were unknown to him.
Jubber states that Pretorius did not give any report to   him about what had happened because it was done on a need-to-know basis.  It   would have been a very serious security transgression if he did so and he would   possibly be expelled from the SAP.  Jubber also did not prepare and submit a   report on the incident.  He says he accepts that by failing to do so he rendered   himself open to prosecution for defeating the ends of justice.  When he visited   the scenes of the attacks to carry out his bogus investigation he knew that   it was just part of the farce to make the people believe that the Police were   not involved.  Jubber confirms that he gave the order to Pretorius to assist   Hechter in the attack on the Modimeng's home.  The same method that was used   in the previous incidents was used, viz he made Pretorius available and after   the attack he visited the scene for the so-called investigation and no formal   report was subsequently made.
Van Vuuren testified that he had been involved with Hechter   in more than three hundred incidents and had a vague recollection of what happened   in the Brown, Ramakobye and Modimeng incidents.  He states that because he was   present when Pretorius testified, he was able to have some recollection of the   incidents in Brits, Oukasie Location, where they threw bombs.  He did not know   the names of the activists and all he knew was that they had been identified   by the local Security Police as opponents of the then government.  He had not   seen the victims prior to the attack and only saw them for the first time at   the hearing.  However, he associated himself with the action of his colleagues.    He was a sergeant and worked under the command of Hechter.  He and Joe Mamasela,   a former member of MK who was turned an askari, worked very closely with Hechter   and were involved in many illegal operations.  The three (3) of them worked   together as a team.  What would  happen was, Hechter would receive an order   from Cronje and he would instruct them to carry out the operation.  Everything   was done strictly on a need-to-know basis and no questions were asked.  He was   purely a foot-soldier and did not deal with files which contained the information   on the activities of suspected opponents of the State.  All he did was to attack   the targets once they had been identified.  It was not for him to decide whether   or not their attack was justified in the circumstances of a particular case.    He admits that in all these operations he foresaw that innocent bystanders could   be killed and he would not have been able to identify the homes without the   help of Pretorius who knew the area and where activists stayed.
Hechter testified that he is presently   suffering from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder ("P.T.S.D.") and as   a result cannot recall the details of all the incidents
in which he was involved.  He states that he is unable to   recall the names: Leonard Brown, David Modimeng, Sello Ramakobye.  However,   he does recall that he operated in the Oukasie area where he carried out acts   of intimidation and torched houses of perceived political enemies of the government   of the day.  However, he is unable to recall when, where and against whom exactly   those attacks were carried out.  Consequently, he accepts the evidence of Pretorius   and Van Vuuren as the only probable thing to have happened in the circumstances   viz that on the evenings in question he bombed the house of Leonard Brown, Sello   Ramakobye and David Modimeng.  He confirms the reporting systems that existed   at the time and say that the names of the victims would have come to his attention   through reports from the divisional office and that Cronje would have suggested   to him that something be done about such persons.  The two would never have   discussed the plan with Pretorius and Mamasela.  They would simply be told to   meet him at a certain place in the evening and they would proceed to the targets.    The details would not have been discussed with them as it was not necessary   for him to do so for the success of the operation.  During the day and before   the trip proceeded to the target he would  have contacted the Brits security   police commander to make arrangements for the covert operation that was to be   carried out in the evening.  The local commander would not be told who the targets   were going to be and would only be asked to make a member(s) available to identify   the premises of the target(s).  Hechter further testified that only he was responsible   for the manufacturing of petrol bombs from fuel, petrolite, bottles and a piece   of cloth which were thrown into the windows of the targets' house.  He admits   that there was very little they could do to avoid hitting innocent civilians.    The only thing they would do was to try and identify the exact room where the   actual target slept.  Hechter says he would not return to the scene of the attack   after the operation and this he would leave to members of the Criminal Investigation   Division to attend.  He goes on to say that the home-made petrol bombs were   used to ensure that no finger would be pointed at the police.  This was all   supposed to be viewed by members of the public and the media as part of the   so-called black on black violence which existed in the black townships at the   time.
Jan Hatting Cronje, due to reasons of ill health, which   were accepted by the Committee could not attend the hearing and instead an affidavit   (Exhibit A) was handed up for consideration.  In the affidavit he states that   he has no recollection of the attack on the targets in Brits, Oukasie, but accepts   that the actions must have been carried out by the applicants in the course   of their duties and functions as members of the security forces.  He confirms   that at the time all the applicants were his subordinates and that it is quite   probable that the attacks were launched as part of the many attacks which occurred   at the time.  He states that he therefore supports their applications and craves   that he also be granted amnesty for all the offences with regard to the said   events.
5.    THE FINDINGS OF THE COMMITTEE
After carefully considering the evidence we are satisfied   that all the Applicants have complied with the requirements of the Act.  There   is no question that they have not given a full disclosure of the material facts   pertaining to the incidents.  We accept that the offences committed are "acts   associated with a political objective" as required by the Act.  There is   no doubt that the Applicants acted in their capacity as members of the security   forces whose task was to defend the former government of the National Party.
Amnesty is therefore GRANTED as   follows:
Jan Hatting Cronje and Robert   Leslie Jubber and Jacques Hechter are granted amnesty for conspiracy to murder   Leonard Brown, Sello Ramakobye, David Modimeng and Joyce Modimeng in Oukasie   Location, Brits, in or about 1986.
They are also GRANTED amnesty   for defeating the ends of justice and for any offence flowing from the incidents.
Jacques Hechter, Machiel Andries   Pretorius and Paul Jacobus Jansen Van Vuuren are GRANTED amnesty for
(1)   The murder of Joyce Modimeng;
(2)   The attempted murder of Leonard Brown, Sello Ramakobye   and David Modimeng at Oukasi in Brits in or about 1986;
(3)   Defeating the ends of justice;
(4)   Any offence in contravention of the Explosives Act;   and
(5)   For any offence or delict flowing from the incidents.
We are further of the opinion   that Joyce Modimeng, David Modimeng, Leonard Brown and Sello Ramakobye are victims   as envisaged in the Act and their names, as well as particulars of the next-of-kin   of Joyce Modimeng are being forwarded to the Reparation and Rehabilitation Committee   for its consideration.
DATED AT CAPE TOWN THIS    DAY OF                  2001.
JUDGE   J. MOTATA
ADV.   N. SANDI
MR   W MALAN
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