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Special Hearings

Type Children's Hearings

Starting Date 14 May 1997

Location DURBAN

Day 3

Names ANN MACKAY, REGINALD WONDER NKOMO, NOSIMELO ZAMA, MAKOZONKHE ELGIAS NZIMANDE, BHEKISIZWE PROFESSOR MBANJWA, KWEZI MALAHLEYA

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CHAIRMAN: (Incomplete) ... a hearing more in the nature of the kind of hearings that we've had for adult people, so there will be a bit more formality, but we hope that because we are dealing with youths and children that we will be able to keep it in a much more friendly way.

So once again I want to welcome all of you, especially those of you who have come from far, and I want to just recognise Mr F J Mbanjwa and Mr M J Makhatini, who are sitting over here. If they would just stand please. They have brought a group of children all the way from Newcastle for us to be here today, so we welcome them especially. We're going to start with a small drama produced by children from Port Shepstone, and that will be followed by a song from another group of children, also from Port Shepstone. So we will start with that, and then we will get on with the more formal side of the hearing. Thank you. After that these children over here in uniforms will come and give us another rendition as well. They're in addition to the programme.

MACHINE SWITCHED OFF

ON RESUMPTION

CHAIRMAN: (Incomplete) ... Mahawu High School from Ngonyameni, and if we could just recognise the three teachers who have accompanied these children, Ms Makeke Nxosana, Ms Thami Nkanye, and Ms Thobile Dludla.

We will now have the drama from the Port Shepstone children, and if we'll just all settle down for a minute and then they'll start.

MACHINE SWITCHED OFF

ON RESUMPTION

CHAIRMAN: For those of you who are not Zulu-speaking

/sorry,

sorry, if we could just have the - is the sound coming out there? Okay. Just so that you can all hear me, I'll just - I won't use the system for now. I think my voice will project far enough. For those of you who are not Zulu-speaking there are headphones which will carry an English translation. We will only have English translation, I'm afraid. The main hall sound will be in Zulu, so that whoever is talking in Zulu you will hear that without any assistance from these headphones. So that only those people who are not Zulu-speaking, if they could please use these headphones so that they can understand what's going on in English. Even if the main speakers are speaking in English the translation will go out to the hall over the main loudspeakers, so everybody will hear very carefully. You needn't worry about that. Please do not remove these units from the hall. They really do not work outside the hall, they are quite useless outside the hall. They form part of a bigger system. They are quite expensive, so they are absolutely useless to you outside the hall. Please don't walk out with them. They are not a radio or a headphone system that you could use somewhere else. They only work inside the hall as part of this arrangement.

We are now going to continue with the main focus of our hearing, and we're going to start with Ann Mackay giving an overview. Okay, I beg your pardon, before we do we're going to light the candle, and then Dr Magwaza will give a preamble to the hearing, an explanation of what this hearing is about and what we're trying to achieve. That will then be followed by Ann Mackay, who will give an overview of gross human rights violations and the impact

/of that

of that on children.

We will probably break for tea at about half past 11, for those of you who have a programme - originally it was scheduled for now - and then we'll see how the morning goes and decide when we will break for lunch thereafter. So just so that people get a sense of what's going to happen. That's what's going to happen now, and we'll break for tea at approximately half past 11.

If I could just introduce you to the members of the panel who will be conducting the hearing. On my left is Professor Simangele Magwaza, who is a member of the Reparations and Rehabilitation Committee of the Truth Commission. Sorry, on my right, I beg your pardon. On my left is Mr Mdu Dlamini, who is a member of the Human Rights Violations Committee, and I am Ilan Lax, as you can see. I'm a member of the Human Rights Violations Committee as well. I hand over to Dr Magwaza.

DR MAGWAZA: I am greeting all of you. I want you to say good morning. I would like to start by acknowledging our Government of National Unity, which has shown a very strong commitment to upholding the rights of the children, the rights for survival, protection, development and participation. Today we are here because we are precisely acknowledging the right of the children to participate in matters affecting their own lives. Nevertheless it is a bit disconcerting to observe that up to now children are still accorded a very marginal, low status in society. The big question which I would like to ask today is where are the adults today? We know we have had previous hearings, and the adults have filled the hall. Why are the adults not here today? Is it because children are not

/important

important enough to them? That's a big question which I am asking today.

In a similar vein we still find that children they are still very disempowered, invisible victims of gross human rights violations, despite the fact that thousands of children in this region have been violated directly. We have seen children moving around with bullets wounds in their bodies, and still many more children have witnessed atrocities, murders and assaults on their parents. We would like to capture that experience today.

To date if we look at our TRC data which we have in our offices we have noticed that very few children under 18 are reflected as having been violated. We know that's not true. We know that for almost every adult that has been violated probably two or more children have suffered. With all good intentions we still find that adults who are traumatised they tend to respond to their own trauma. They are very much concerned about their own trauma, and find it difficult to avail themselves to the trauma of the children. Hence to a large extent we find that most of the adults are not aware that children are affected by trauma, that children do witness trauma.

I understand there's a problem with translation. There is? Just be patient a little bit. (Pause) I can continue, but I feel that children who have to hear - people who are here who do not understand the language will have to hear every word of the proceedings today, so I will stop for a moment until everybody can understand what's being said.

CHAIRMAN: Can I make a suggestion that we have a little song for a minute or two, if someone would like to lead us

/in song,

in song, and then in a few minutes we should have the system back working as planned.

MACHINE SWITCHED OFF

ON RESUMPTION

DR MAGWAZA: I will be very brief now. In the beginning I did acknowledge our Government for showing a strong commitment to upholding the rights of the children, including that one of participation, and that we are here today because of that right for participation. Yet to a large extent we still feel that children are accorded a very low, marginal status in society.

English is on channel two.

I was saying that the very fact that we have very few adults today here, that's a strong message that we still don't take the children seriously. We know in this region that thousands of children have been violated, that the children need our support as adults. With all good intentions from adults sometimes we experience problems, not being aware that are children are invisible witnesses. Sometimes we fail to notice trauma in our own children. At other times we don't even believe that children they can grieve and mourn if they lose their parents and care-givers. Children, especially very young ones, are sometimes paralysed by trauma. They might not even have skills to communicate their trauma. How many times have we seen sad eyes locked in frozen expressions, but being unable to express themselves? Children do suffer in silence.

We, as adults, sometimes we keep a conspiracy of silence around the suffering of children because it's too painful for us to deal with it, or simply because we don't

/have

have skills. But if we, as adults, we cannot face the suffering of children, how are we going to help them to heal and forgive?

The society at large can sometimes be harsh to children. Children have been criminalised, treated as criminals, when in fact they are traumatised. Some of the children have been thrown into streets by violence. We only see them as problems to us. Sometimes we stigmatise these children, we don't treat them as normal people.

We also have youth who have fought for this country, whom we need to acknowledge and reaffirm. Some of them have lost opportunities for lifetime. Yet despite all that pain and suffering our children here are very resilient and strong. We have seen this morning how strong our children are. Children are our future generation. They represent South Africa's most critical national asset, therefore today we want to share their invaluable experiences, and we would like to hear their voices. Thank you very much.

CHAIRMAN: Thank you, Professor Magwaza. I think just so we can finally sort out all the technical problems we've decided to break for tea now. The tea people are ready upstairs. We will take a 15 minute tea break, and if you could all be back in the hall please at quarter past 11. We have lost some time, so we would like to try and proceed promptly. Thank you.

HEARING ADJOURNS

/

ON RESUMPTION

ON RESUMPTION

CHAIRMAN: We will be having two witnesses from yesterday, Thokozani Shelembe from Inanda, and Moses Zulu from Bhambayi. They will be talking about the evidence that they heard yesterday of the various children who spoke in groups. If we can just swear them each in please.

THOKOZANI SHELEMBE: and

MOSES ZULU: (Sworn, State)

CHAIRMAN: I would suggest that you put on the headphones. The Zulu is on channel 3. Can you hear the Zulu now? Okay. If you can then proceed please. --- I would like to greet the Commission, or the Chairman of this Commission, and to greet everyone who is here today. My name is Thokozani Shelembe. I am from Inanda. As you can all remember that KwaZulu-Natal is one province which was ahead in violence in all the provinces, as we all know that the police were not helping this, and we know like Hlangezi area, where the IFP members were harassing people and police were doing nothing about this.

INTERPRETER: Could the speaker speak a little bit slower please.

CHAIRMAN: If you could just speak a little bit slower please, because the translator's translating at the same time as you are talking. --- I was referring to how the police used to ignore or to protect the society, and instead of doing this they were the ones who were perpetrating these activities. Police didn't help the society. Members of UDF ran away from their houses, and one day one member of the UDF wanted to visit his home, and when he was on his way going home he met police and he

/thought

thought he was secured or safe, but then he was shot by the police. Today he is paralysed, he is using walking sticks. And in schools we were harassed. Our houses were burnt down before our eyes. We couldn't even concentrate in classes, we couldn't listen to teachers. Even if we tried to concentrate in class behind us houses were burnt down. We were supposed to leave school and go and take care of our siblings, younger siblings, and grandmothers and grandfathers. And all this happened before police eyes, and in fact they were the ones who were doing these things. We can't put blame on them. They were not working, they were doing these things because they needed money, they needed something to provide for their families. Because our houses were burnt we couldn't meet with our families. Until today the youth of KwaZulu-Natal can't meet eye to eye with the police. We're asking the Government that he or she must build houses for orphanage so that we take care of the orphans. We don't have houses. Our parents have no money to take us to school or to further our education. We ask the Government that they should provide employment for those people who are not working. If all these things can be attended to we won't face any criminality in KwaZulu-Natal. Thank you.

Thank you, Thokozani. You mentioned a person that was paralysed. --- Yes, there is one.

What's the name of that person, just for our records? --- His name is Wonder. He was staying at KwaNdengezi.

Thank you. All right, if you could then, Moses, tell us and give us your report please. If you will please just press the red button in front of you. Thank

/you. ---

you. --- Thank you. I would like to greet the Chairman and the committee members and the society. I would talk about how the youth or the children of KwaZulu-Natal were affected by the violence, and as we all know police didn't help in doing this. Instead they were the perpetrators themselves. And then the youth of this province was divided because they were used, criminals were assaulting and harassing society in the name of the politics. They were killing people, and all these events led to criminalities and to alcohol abuse. And the youth was divided and they couldn't listen to adults because of all this. And the youth couldn't further their education. Most of them they are uneducated today. The youth of this province they don't have hope for tomorrow or for the future. The youth of this province they don't have faith in sport, education. Most of them are suffering from trauma and depression, and our society today is unable to help these things. That's why there's an idiom that says if you give youth or children bread you're giving the future, you're making sure of the future, but in this province there's no future because there's no children. We're asking the society, the Government, that they should stand up, more especially they should try and help the children who are between seven to 15 years, because those were the main children who lost parents because parents ran away, they were escaping for their lives, and the siblings, elderly ones, they ran away. And again I would like to thank this Commission for giving the youth this opportunity to come forward and say whatever we want to say, whatever is in our heart, and to tell the Government what happened with our lives, and to also thank the

/Government

Government for giving us this opportunity, and to ask the Government to help the youth, especially the youth which helped before. Thank you.

Thank you, Moses, for helping us to hear your voice. Let me just check whether any of my colleagues wish to ask any questions.

INTERPRETER: The speaker's mike is not on.

COMMISSIONER: You have told us of your wishes, and maybe you can enlight us, you can tell us more about the society, or your view how you want the society to work together with the youth so that we reach one goal, or so that we better your lives as youth. --- What I would like to put forward before the Commission is that adults should give youth hope. We can do whatever as long as we are working together with our parents or with adults. I would like to ask this Commission, and adults, and the Government, that we should all work together. We lost trust or faith.

CHAIRMAN: Thank you to both of you for giving us a sense of your experience, a sense of your despair, and a sense of your hope for the future. We really understand that it's very difficult to have a feeling that nobody is backing you up, and we hope that in giving you and others this opportunity you will have that sense that the Commission is backing you up, that society is backing you up. And, having heard your voices, we hope that when our recommendations go to the Government, and to the State President, that they will take seriously the things that we have conveyed that we have heard from you. So thank you for coming forward. --- Thank you.

/

CHAIRMAN

CHAIRMAN: The next person who will be talking is Ann Mackay, who is from the KwaZulu-Natal Survivors of Violence project. She will be giving us an overview of gross human rights violations and the impact on children and youth.

ANN MACKAY: (Sworn, States)

CHAIRMAN: If you could continue then please. --- I think, as we heard from the previous two speakers, that hundreds of thousands of children under the age of 18 were affected by the gross human rights violations that were perpetrated in the name of apartheid, and by people who, knowingly or unknowingly, were acting in the interests of promoting apartheid.

During the years of the state of emergency the security forces, whose role in society was above all to protect children, were given the legal ability to disregard all legislation that protected children, such as the Child Care Act and the Criminal Procedure Act. This allowed them to treat children and mistreat children in much the same way as they were mistreating adults in that period of rebellion against apartheid.

An example of this is that in the years 1984 to 1986, which was merely two years of the many years of repression ... (intervention)

Ann, if I could just ask you to slow down a little bit so that it can be translated. --- Okay.

Thank you. --- Over 300 children were killed during those two years. Over 1 000 were wounded. 18 000 were arrested for protesting, and a massive 173 000 children were arrested awaiting trial, and of these

/children

children only 25% ever came to trial, even given the large number of repressive laws available to charge them with. Thousands of children were detained during those years, between 25% and 46% of all detainees. Over 75% of detainees during that period were severely tortured during detention, so we are in fact looking at the severe ill-treatment at the hands of the Government of hundreds of thousands of children. Thousands of other children were killed, were directly targeted and killed - either targeted as activists or killed when their families were attacked, either by the security forces or during political violence. And again many thousands of children lost their parents. I think the previous two speakers highlighted the effects on the children's lives of having lost their homes and their parents.

In this province particularly so many children were forced to run away from home to avoid those who were targeting them politically. There are youth all over this province still, in 1997, who cannot go home because political opponents will not let them go back to live with their parents. They have said to us in workshops that we've run in other places in the province that they are living on sufferance, that they dare not be themselves because they do not know if the people who are giving them shelter now will get rid of them. They cannot go to school because there is no one to pay their school fees. They cannot live properly because there are no parents to take care of them. They are very vulnerable to the police, and they are constantly harassed. They can't complain when criminals steal their clothes or their blankets because there's no one to protect them. And,

/above

above all, they feel that they are not getting help from society, that no one even knows that they're there, and no one cares.

Children who are exposed to the distress and trauma that has been described earlier frequently develop symptoms of stress. Some children become emotionally detached. They find themselves unable to relate to others. They find it difficult to communicate, and very difficult to trust the people around them. Others experience mental distress, which interferes with their concentration and makes it difficult for them to think and to concentrate if they are still schooling.

The previous speakers mentioned the depression and the despair, the feeling that life is worthless and there is nothing to look forward to. May youth have reported experiencing amnesia, whereby they forget and they can't remember important things in their lives. Many others suffer psychosomatic problems - constant headaches, constant backache, stomach aches. Others develop eating and sleeping problems, and many, if not all, experience a constant sense of anger and betrayal, a sense of bitterness and resentfulness that the adults who were meant to have protected them, and the police, and the army and the teachers, and the school principals, and all the people in society who were supposed to protect children, let them down.

But children recover from such feelings if they are given sufficient support. I think if we look at our present Government today we will see so many of them were young leaders who experienced repression, detention, torture, but they have come through. In fact they are the

/very

very leaders of our society today. So it is clear to me that children can overcome the most horrible experiences if they get the support from their society that they deserve.

When we asked youth in the townships around Durban what they needed, the support they needed, they mentioned how important it was to be able to talk to experienced adults. They spoke about how important it is to have someone who is sensible to talk about your anger with, somebody who will not pour petrol on your anger, but will give you good advice and will really listen to you and help you find a solution. They needed somebody, a trusted friend, who would understand their feelings and would listen to them and help them find ways out of the trouble that was in their lives. That is what the youth were asking from the adults around them.

But for many children in this province the very family and friendship support networks which they relied on were destroyed by the policies of apartheid. Apartheid policies systematically destroyed the family life of black communities, making it very difficult for parents to take care of their children and to be emotionally available to listen to their children. I want to quote what the Reverend Frank Chikani said in 1986.

"Being born into apartheid South Africa for most black children meant being subjected to the deprivation and violence associated with living in the squalid, crime-infested ghettos created by the apartheid government for those not classified white. It meant

/malnutrition

malnutrition, poor health; receiving an education in the usually understaffed, ill-equipped, and overcrowded schools designed for blacks; discriminatory social security and social support; hardly ever seeing ones parents, because they either worked long hours for exploitative, local, predominantly white-controlled enterprises, or were migrant labourers living far away from their homes; living in communities constantly destabilised by forced removals ... (inaudible - end of Side B, Tape 2) ... predominant white group. In essence apartheid gave rise to, and fed on, the brutalisation of black children and the communities in which they were located. To a certain extent the brutalisation of black children can be seen as having been a precondition for the functioning and the success of apartheid, because in order to succeed this system had to produce an oppressed group that was so dehumanized that it would accept white dominance without too much protest. The pressure on families was relentless - the poverty, the degradation of the living conditions of the townships, the rural areas, and the informal settlements; the malnutrition, which had in some years as many as four

/children

children dying per day of malnutrition; the migrant labour practices, which meant that so many fathers were away from their children; and, perhaps worse in our patriarchal society, that so many mothers were separated from their children for long years. And those parents who were there for their children working the long hours. Sometimes leaving the home before the children were even away for school, and coming home after the children were in bed.

So whom did these children have to talk to when the police had tear gassed their school and beaten them on the way home? Who did the children have to listen to them after they had come out of torture and detention? In many cases a traumatised child was merely an extra burden on the family, another problem for parents to have to deal with amongst all the many problems they already had.

And I think, as it has been said, that children became alienated from their parents, and lost trust, and lost the faith, and lost the communication that should exist between the generations, and this has had very dire consequences for our society.

Many people have spoken about the increase of crime in South Africa at the moment, and many have blamed the availability of weapons, the arms smuggling that is still continuing, and all sorts of other social factors, which do contribute to the crime. There have been a lot of complaints about policing, there have been a lot of

/complaints

complaints about not following up on crime and so on, but there has been so little looking at what - what is our society to young people who have been hurt by the past? What is bringing them back into society? What are we asking them to do when there are no jobs and there are no recreation facilities, and there are no counselling services, and there are no places for them to understand their pain, and to come to terms with it and to move on from it?

This has had many bad effects on community life. Often in the poorest communities it is those communities

where people have been the most traumatised, and yet the very developments which would bring hope to these communities is retarded by the lack of trust, and the hypersensitivity, and the power struggles, and the inability to actually communicate trust and relate to one another which is necessary for development to go forward. I believe in this province millions of rands were budgeted for development last year which were not spent because development committees were too conflicted to make proper decisions about spending the money. So we have the tragic situation where the very people who were hurt the most have become so hurt that they are the ones who are damaging the chances for themselves and their communities to move forward, and I think that we need to understand that the effects of violence are not simple, the effects of trauma are not simple. It is not simply that a person is exposed to horrendous events and immediately becomes traumatised. It is the society in which they live which determines whether they are or are not traumatised, and it is our responsibility to make sure that we take this

/seriously,

seriously, and that we put taxpayers' money aside, we put resources aside, and we pay attention to the needs of young people so that there are the support services that they have asked for, the support services that they have spoken about are provided, or we will only have ourselves to blame if the society sinks further into the misery and pain which was started by the agents of apartheid.

That's all I have to say.

CHAIRMAN: Thank you, Ann. Are there any comments or questions from my panellists? Mr Dlamini?

MR DLAMINI: Thank you, Mr Chairman. Maybe my question

might not be quite relevant to your hearings, but as Ann was sharing with us her experiences I was quickly reminded of the children that we normally see in the streets. The temptation is there to think of those children as delinquents who have run away from home because they don't want to subject themselves to their parents. But Ann, from your experience how many of those children, what percentage of them, possibly could be the victims of violence, the displaced children who have no homes, who are separated from their parents and the rest of the family because of the violence that has been taking place in our communities? --- I think there are child care workers in this audience who are probably more equipped than I to answer that, but having followed the press in the last few years it is clear that many of the children on the streets of Durban have been displaced from their communities by the violence, and have ended up coming to Durban to take shelter. I personally know of two or three from the north coast whose families asked them to please leave because their presence and their political activity

/were

were bringing unwanted attention to the family, and their only option - given the poverty of their family they could not be sent away, there was no one to send them to, and they had to literally take to the streets and hope that social workers would find them a place to stay, which is an awful solution for a family and children to have to come to. I think that the other factors - the violence in general has destabilised rural communities in this province. I think in other provinces, where the violence and police harassment was happening in the townships, children were often sent to the farms for safekeeping with

the rural families. However, the rural areas here in this province have never been safe, and those children end up having nowhere to go, it being too dangerous to stay at home in the township and it being too dangerous to stay in the rural areas, and they have been displaced to the streets of our cities. But I think the stress on family life created by the constant pressure of the violence in this province cannot be underestimated. We've heard mothers in Bhambayi saying that they are literally too tired to take care of their children, even now in 1997, because their minds are full of the violence and they have no hope for the future. So they are not able to give that emotional nurturing and support to their children years after the violence has finished, because they have never received support, they have never received any place where they can feel safe enough to deal with their emotions so that they are emotionally available for their children. And it would not be surprising to me that the children of such depressed mothers would end up running away from home, because at home they are being neglected because

/their

their mothers are too depressed and too sad to take care of them.

Probably again this might be an unfair question, but if somebody were to ask you that what are the most essential resources that we need to start addressing this problem what would you say, Ann? --- I think first and foremost that, as the adults that are in a sense the representatives of our society, we need to acknowledge to young people what has happened to them. We actually need to admit to ourselves that we have millions of children who either have left school, or are reaching the end of

schooling, and there are no jobs for them to go to. We have to acknowledge that. We cannot wait for the RDP and the Makro Economic Plan to come up with economic growth. They are unemployed at the moment. They are at a loose end and not knowing where to go with their futures at the moment. I think the previous speakers spelt it out clearly. They wanted training. They wanted skills training. They want youth programmes. They want the Youth Commission to do something about their problems. They want youth centres, where recreational and intellectual development opportunities are available in their townships, because they don't have money to travel to town and visit the museums, and so on and so forth, here. Many of them left school at a very early age, and intelligent, interested, intellectually stimulated youth are walking around with standard five or standard seven education, with no one to recognise their potential. Other countries have increased the schooling available so that ex-combatants can go back to school and be educated with people of their own age, not sitting 25-year-olds in

/the same

the same classroom as 15-year-olds. They want proper adult education programmes whereby they can complete their schooling and go forward to fulfil their intellectual development. I think that the demands are very simple and very practical, but the many - much of the psychological relief would come from having these problems acknowledged, and having them on the debate and on the agenda.

CHAIRMAN: Thanks, Ann. Dr Magwaza.

DR MAGWAZA: I have one short question for you, Ann. I think one of the feelings is that because of the extent and nature of violence in our region people are tending to

under-report the violence that's affecting the children, and that there is a lot of desensitization, and that we are not getting a complete picture of the extent to which children are violated. Can you make your comment on that one? --- I would strongly agree with that. I don't think it's just children who are being under-reported. I think the extent to which community life and family life has broken down, and the extent to which people are dispersed and detached from their support networks, means that often there's no one to tell the story, and there's no one to pass on the news. Any person - any NGO, any social worker, or any person living in a rural area has horror stories to tell of how people are still suffering now, and the kinds of - it might not be the political violence that is still happening, but the violence that has started to happen within communities, and within families, as people turn their pain and anger on each other, is something that never gets reported, and it's reached quite horrendous proportions. But if you are poor, and if you are living far away from the city, and if /there

there are no telephones and there's no NGOs, and there's no one to notice, this violence just carries on week to week, month to month, year to year, and I don't think we begin to understand how many people are still living in very difficult circumstances as a result of this kind of violence. I have been shocked to find out how many people are still refugees in this province, are still living in temporary, unsatisfactory and dangerous shelter, two, three, five, seven years after they were thrown out of their communities, and where the local community leaders are still refusing to allow them to return home, and still

threatening violence and death if they do return home. We are so many years down the road to transition and these things are still happening in this province.

CHAIRMAN: Just one last comment from myself. There was a time when it was popular to talk about the so-called lost generation, the so-called unhelpable people. Listening to some of the witnesses over the last two days, and listening to your presentation, I get a sense that things are not immutable, in the sense that this so-called lost generation is lost forever. Just a comment on that. --- I wish I'd brought it with me - there's a poem written by a young woman from Inanda which is published in a book of poems and short stories written by IFP and ANC youths by a programme this year, where she says, "Who are you to call us the lost generation? We are not lost, but we were deprived," and I think that that is the basis of it, and I think that most people - I mean I see the youth here reaching out their hands to society to be included, to be brought back on board. I think that it would really be a very small percentage who are so hardened, damaged,

/psychologically

psychologically distressed, that you could say that they were lost. I think it's purely a question of resources and the will power to reach out to young people on the margins of society and to bring them back in. It is not their fault that they are there. It is not their fault that there is unemployment. It is not their fault that there wasn't enough schooling. It is our fault and our responsibility to bring them back.

Ann, thank you for that overview. I know you had to skim through some aspects of it, and that it was a lot more detailed, the actual document you presented us with.

And, on behalf of the panel, we want to thank you for that, and for the insights which it provides to us. As I have indicated, one of the tasks of this Commission is to make recommendations to the State President and the Government on measures for reparation and rehabilitation, and, as we said yesterday, almost half the population of this country is under 20, which means that the measures that we have to put in place have to cater for them. And the insights you've provided us with here, and the insights which we'll gather from other provinces, where similar hearings will be held, will, we hope, contribute to a better set of recommendations to the State President in due course. So, once again thank you for coming. --- Thank you for this opportunity.

/

CHAIRMAN

CHAIRMAN: The next witness is Reginald Wonder Nkomo. Could he please come up to the stage. Sorry, if I could just have a word with the TV producer for a moment please. (Pause) Good afternoon, Reginald. Thank you for coming. I see that your second name is Wonder, and clearly you must be the person that Thokozani spoke about. --- That is correct.

Before you commence with your evidence would you please stand and just take the oath.

REGINALD WONDER NKOMO: (Sworn, States)

CHAIRMAN: I am going to hand you to Mr Dlamini, who will take you through your evidence.

MR DLAMINI: Thank you, Mr Chairman. Good morning, Wonder. Wonder, we thank you for coming forward to give us your testimony as to how you were injured. Before you give testimony I will ask you questions because I need this information for my records. First of all we would like to know about your family. Do you still have your parents? --- Yes, I do have my mother. I don't have my father. My mother is still alive.

Is she working? --- Yes, I can say she is working even though it's not a registered job, it's just a temporary job.

I would like you to raise your voice because I think most of the audience are listening from you from whatever you are saying. What about your father? --- My father died when I was 13 years.

Was it because of the violence in KwaNdengezi? --- No, it wasn't.

Are you still staying at KwaNdengezi? --- Yes,

/we are

we are still staying there.

Do you have brothers and sisters? --- It's just the two of us at home. It's me and my kid brother. He is 22, I am 24 years. He is 22 and I am 24.

What is he doing? --- He is at Natal Technikon. He is a student there. He is doing marketing management last year, final year. His name is Zanele Nkomo.

In your testimony, Wonder, you mentioned something about the ANC Youth. You said it got divided. I know you will explain this to us as you give us your testimony, but I want people to have a background knowledge about what you're going to say. You mentioned that there was a group called Mavaravara and Congress. Why were they divided? --- Even though I don't have a full knowledge about this, but I think there were brothers whom I won't mention their name. They were working with the system they didn't like peace in the townships, and they were doing things their ways.

And then you mentioned about the Mavaravara group. You said they belonged to both ANC organisation and yet they were used as agents for police. --- Let me put this very clear. I won't say they were agents of the police, but I think there were 15 members who came to KwaNdengezi. They were planted by the security force.

What made your organisation, your group to be divided? --- I would like not to respond to this question.

Okay. Now you can tell us more about what happened on the 22nd of November 1991. --- I would like to first mention that I am not quite sure whether it was 21st or 22nd, but I was born on November 14th 1973, so this

/thing

thing happened after a week - a week after my birthday. That's when I got injured at KwaNdengezi. The police did this to me.

Can you please tell us what happened? --- In my township we experienced two great or big violence. The first one was in 1983 and then 1991. When I got injured -we left the township in 1990 because we experienced conflict and some of our brothers had died, therefore we decided to leave and go outside. But these people were overpowering us because they were together with police, therefore we spread ourselves around. Some of us went to KwaMashu, Clermont, Ntuzuma. I can't count all of them. We used to mention among ourselves that if you wished to go back home to visit your parents you can do that at your own risk. If some of you know the bridge in a freeway to KwaNdengezi, they call it Desai, and we used to use that route when we were going to KwaNdengezi. And these people who were responsible for us running away from KwaNdengezi, they used to hide themselves there, and they knew that we will use that route. And there was no other route for us to get inside so they would hide themselves there. They were using binoculars. One day I took a risk to visit my parents, because it was after a long time and I was missing my grandmother, because she was the one who brought me up. And I was missing her a lot, so I decided I should take this risk and go and visit my parents. When I arrived at Road 1, it's a turn-off from a freeway if you're going to KwaNdengezi. That's the route you use to go to Route 1. Because I was careless that day there were ... (inaudible) ... which I have noticed. I saw them waiting uphill, and I noticed them but I said to myself,

/"Maybe

"Maybe they are just waiting there." That's why I am saying these people were working together with the police because they were using binoculars and over radio. And they called the police, the called ZP Police, and then the police came driving the van, police van. And they knew that anyone who was using that route was their enemy. They used to call us criminals, com-tsotsi, meaning criminal Comrades. Before I arrived there there's a place where there's no grass. I can't actually put everyone in picture as to what happened, because after that incident I lost consciousness and I was admitted. I only regained my conscious after eight days. I don't what happened. All I remember is that they just shot at me, and they were close. I can say they were 20 metres. It wasn't that far. And they shot at me and then took my body. They shot me at my legs, both legs, and my arm, and also my stomach. They took me to the police station instead of hospital, and then after police station they took me to King Edward. They didn't even call an ambulance, they used a police van. And in hospital they were there ... (incomplete - end of Side A, Tape 2) ... no one can hear me now. While I was in hospital I was being tortured. Police were there, ZP Police, and I only discovered that they have opened a case. I was charged for public violence. While they were watching me in hospital they were torturing me. I couldn't walk. As from 1991 until 1997 I have been in plaster of Paris, or my leg rather has been in plaster of Paris for seven years. They were torturing me in hospital because they knew I couldn't walk.

Who were these police who were torturing you in

/hospital?

hospital? --- These were the ZP Police. ZP Police took me from where they shot me and then they took me to police station and then to hospital, and they were there. I don't know who told them to keep on treating me the way they did. I was in hospital and laying in bed for one year seven months, and they kept on telling me I was a prisoner. I was transferred to Wentworth Hospital. Even there same treatment. What's very sad about this is that the people who were torturing me were black policemen. There was no single white policeman who tortured me or who handcuffed me, but only the African ones, African policemen, day and night. They were working shifts. Some of them would come in the morning and some will come in the evening. I was discharged from hospital, they took me to custody with my leg in plaster of Paris. I think it was on Monday, and they took me to court. I was supposed to appear before the Magistrate for something I haven't done. I didn't even know why I was supposed to appear in court, and in court they told me I was charged for public violence. They asked me if I plead guilty or not. I told them I wasn't guilty, and my mother came and bailed me out.

When we investigated this matter, Wonder, we found that another charge which was laid was for murder, for assault. Did they explain these to you? --- No. I was told about public violence, only public violence case.

And when TRC investigators investigate we found that they charged you for murder and assault. Also I would like you, Wonder, to clarify something. According to the police records you were in hospital for five months, and you were discharged in April 1992, and in your knowledge

/it was

it was one year seven months. Can you please clarify here? --- Okay, I will. As I have said before I used two hospitals, King Edward and Wentworth. I used to go home for like two weeks, and when I go back for check up they'll admit me and stay in hospital for three months, four months. That's why I said I spent one year seven months in hospital.

You also said initially that this group called Mavaravara they used to call you com-tsotsi, meaning criminal Comrades. What made them call you like this? --- I can't say, because I really don't know what happened to their minds. I don't have any reason. Maybe it was because we left to KwaNdengezi. Maybe that's why they called us com-tsotsi.

Can't you remember an event, maybe, which might have led that the community would call you as criminals? --- No, there was no single event.

Wonder, you also mentioned in your statement that you would like to get help from specialists to help you with your leg. --- Yes, that's what I have asked for.

How do you feel now? How is your leg? --- As I am here today I am going back to hospital on Friday. I don't know how long I am going to be in hospital, because I am going to be admitted. On the 16th I am supposed to go back to King Edward.

Are the doctors telling you that there is hope for you, for your leg? --- I have spoken to Dr Snock. He explained to me that if I can get help from the welfare he can help me to get hold of the specialist who can help me, and it might be better that this situation or this condition.

/You just

You just said you are going there on Friday. Can you ask your doctor to make a letter or to write a letter to advise the Commission as to where to get hold of this specialist, what kind of specialist, and would like to get hold of those doctors? Would you please ask him to write us a letter and explain as to what help we can give? Thank you, Wonder. I will go back to the Chairman.

Wonder, I have questions meant specifically for you. I can realise that you are still young, and you look handsome, and if you can just explain to us, or just give us a picture of your life, your life after the injury, and also your wishes, the ones that you had and the ones that you still have. Like you can start by explaining to us up to what standard you finished schooling. --- I left school in standard six because of the violence. Like as I have said that we couldn't stay in our homes, we had to run to the mountains or hills. I have a wish to become someone like my brothers, like my kid brother. He is younger than me, but now he is far. He had furthered his education. I don't know what to do, and time has run out. But I would also like to go back to school, but because of the condition and the problems and troubles that I am facing I am one person who is always in and out in hospital, and I also ask the doctors to help me.

I also have one comment that of course they've taken something from your life, they have taken some opportunities from your life which you will never regain, but there is something left in your where you can build something on, and you can get support. There is still hope. Thank you.

/

CHAIRMAN

CHAIRMAN: Wonder, just one aspect I wanted to try and follow up on. What do you know about the terrible violence in 1983 that you spoke about? Can you tell us anything about that? --- I would like to clarify that. It wasn't 1983 but it was 1985.

1985. Can you tell us anything about that? --- In 1985, even though I can't remember everything because I was still young - even though I wasn't very young - I can still make a recollection of some events in 1985. Because in 1985 I also ran away from home, I left for Hammarsdale, because in my township there were IFP members, and I had to go and attend school in Clermont every day from KwaNdengezi because of the situation at that time. A lot of torture and harassment I have met. Some of the things I can't even recall, I can't even explain.

So this was more political violence between IFP people and non-IFP people - what, would have been UDF at that time? --- At that time at KwaNdengezi Inkatha was dominating, and another organisation which was called UDF.

Thank you. Wonder, we want to thank you for coming and sharing with us the story of your pain and your injuries. As we have said many, many times in this Commission, it is terrible for us when we hear stories of police, who are supposed to protect the community, who are supposed to behave in an impartial way, and who end up in fact abusing the community and behaving in a very one-sided way. We hope that as we move into the future, and as our police forces start to change their attitudes and become part of the community again, that these sorts of practices will stop happening, and that we can learn from

/your pain.

your pain. So once again thank you for coming and thank you for sharing with us.

/

CHAIRMAN

CHAIRMAN: The next person who will be coming up to the stage will be the first facilitator from the children's groups yesterday. The person who will be talking is Nosimelo Zama, who is one of our staff members, who is the co-ordinator of Reparations and Rehabilitation Committee's work in this province and the Free State. Melo, before you start if you could please stand up to take the oath.

NOSIMELO ZAMA: (Sworn, States)

I would like to greet the audience. I would relate a story which I heard yesterday, and this story I have heard from the youth. In fact these are children under the age of 16 years. They were relating their stories and they were drawing some drawings to explain. And most of the children whom I would - these are the children who are from Desai, Dassenhoek, Clermont, KwaXaba, KwaMashu, and what we've discovered is that most of them found themselves in those areas not because it was their initial homes, but they are there because of violence. They ran away from home. Some of them don't even remember where their home are. They didn't even have a whole idea as to what was going on, they just come out with stories that maybe the chief was in conflict with a certain organisation, or members of the organisation. As Professor Magwaza have explained before this Commission that sometimes when the attackers were attacking the families children suffered, and they ran away. And yesterday one child made a drawing of a little boy who was killed, and that was her brother. And what's more sad is that in those drawings the child could reveal the person who actually killed the brother, and the child can still

/remember

remember the name of the person who killed the brother, and the child had drawn everything. He drawn the killer with a gun, and he painted this killer black because that's the vision the child has. And I would like the Commission to play the tape so that you hear what the child said yesterday. Now the child is now 13, the other one is 10 years old, and also the child explain how the father was killed in front of him. I would like the Commission to just play the tape for you to hear exactly what the children said.

"We were at the farms, and people came to our house, and those people were known as Inkatha members. And then late at night Inkatha members came to my house. They killed my father. They also shot my mother. They thought she was dead, and then they realised that she wasn't. We called the police and police ..."

(incomplete) We apologise because we had to stop here and not to reveal whatever the child has said here, because it's sensitive.

"I was sleeping in the bed and my face was burnt, and my mother was burnt because she came to my rescue. Police van came, took us to hospital. When we arrived in hospital we were treated and then we came back. We went to a slum area. That's where they killed my brother and my grandfather. My grandfather died. My brother survived. They wanted my uncle. I don't know why

/they were

they were after my uncle, but they did all these killings because they were after my uncle."

As you have heard these stories are the evidence of how families were tortured, and how children were traumatised because of experiencing or seeing family members being killed before their eyes. And their houses were burnt, their clothes, everything, and they couldn't go to school the next day because they lost everything. And even parents got separated because one member will want to run away and the other one will say, "I sit here. I will rather die here." And what's very sad is that these people were indiscriminate in their killings, they were killing children. And there's another drawing here with me. This drawing was drawn by a child who is eight years old, and you can see in this drawing there's a man who's pouring a petrol in the house and setting the house alight. And the child is explaining that he still has bullets in his system, two of them. Doctors can't remove them, and in his whole life he can't go away from this situation no matter how much he tries to forget it, but he'll always have something to remind him of what happened to him. The last-born was shot at the head, and also he was burnt, and still not healed. These are the situations our children are living in. He also drew a photograph of the killers, who are standing at the door with guns while the other one was setting the house alight. Now we will play the tape of that child.

"The chief came at home and he kept on coming, and then my mother asked my brother that why was the chief around."

/As I

As I have said that we've erased some of the things.

"And my mother told my brother, Goli, not to sleep at home because she was scared. And then the chief came late a night. We didn't see them coming. What we heard was gunfire. They first set the house alight and then they shot. They shot and killed my mother, my brother, Goli, my sister, Mxane, who was also my twin sister. They were all killed.

And what happened to you and your brother? --- They also shot at me, but I survived because I escaped at the house. I went outside, and it was me and my sister. They also shot my brother, Sanelo, and he didn't die. He was eight years old. They shot at him. We left for clinic. When we arrived at the clinic my sister made a call to the police. The police came and took us to hospital.

What happened to your baby sister? --- They also shotted her. They shot her at her head, and then my mother had been burnt out at that time. Pilangezo, my brother, also died.

Explain now where are you staying, as to where you're staying? --- We are staying with my sister. We don't know what happened to my father, and the house we're staying in it's very small."

/I would

I would like to continue from here above all these. These are just what we've selected just to give the public knowledge as to how children were violated. And there was also a six-year-old and a 10-year-old kid who were also violated. After the perpetrators came and killed everyone they didn't leave the house. Instead they continued to rape the child, a six-year-old, and now the child can't even relate the story. If she's relating this she is crying. Even in school she can't cope,and the teachers have sent her back because - back by one class because they thought maybe she wasn't fit for the class she was in. Now she knows these perpetrators, she can still see them. Now I would like us to play her tape as well.

"They started throwing tear gas, and then they left - in February. And then he raped me. Now in school people came on Monday for me, and I wasn't there. My mother is not working. We don't have clothes to wear ... (incomplete - end of Side B, Tape 2) ... you must see. We don't have shoes."

As you have heard the child can't even relate her story, and basically the society haven't paid much attention on children, and instead when they talk about violence they talk about adults. And some parents have separated from that violence. Some parents they have been taken by police. Up until today they never came back home. As you have heard some are now with grandparents or sisters, and these people who are care-givers are facing problems because they can't provide all the needs for these children. It's very sad to know that children have

/suffered

suffered more than we as adults have.

CHAIRMAN: Thank you, Melo. Before you go ... (inaudible) ... comments. Nothing? Thank you then as one of the facilitators of those groups for that very, very powerful insight into what children spoke about. I was quite worried personally that we would not hear the voices of the children below the age of 18, and I am pleased to see the creative way in which it's been included into the process. So thank you very much.

/

CHAIRMAN

CHAIRMAN: The next person who we will call up will be Makozonkhe Elgias Nzimande. Unfortunately we will continue to half past one, when lunch will be ready. The caterers have asked us to please do that so they can prepare a bit more food for some of the additional children who are here today. Welcome, Makozonkhe. Can you hear me on the headphones?

MR NZIMANDE: Yes.

CHAIRMAN: You have come to us from Pinetown.

MR NZIMANDE: Before you give your evidence could you please rise to take the oath.

MAKOZONKHE ELGIAS NZIMANDE: (Sworn, States)

CHAIRMAN: I will hand you over to my colleague, Professor Magwaza, who will help you through your evidence.

DR MAGWAZA: Good afternoon, Makozonkhe. We would like to thank you for coming here today and to be willing to give us a picture of your life and the torture which you've experienced. Before you give us that picture I would ask you to just give us a picture of your family, your brothers, your sisters, your whole family. (Pause) Just to give us a picture of your family, and then afterwards then you will tell us more about yourself. We need to know about your parents, your sisters, your brothers. --- We are two in my family. It's my elder brother, and I am the last-born. And we were staying at KwaNdengezi, but now we are staying at KwaDabeka. When we left KwaNdengezi we did so because of violence.

Before you go in there, do you still have parents? --- I have a mother, I don't have a father.

/Before

Before we go on, what standard were you in when you left KwaNdengezi? --- I was in standard six.

Okay. --- "When we left KwaNdengezi for KwaDabeka because of violence," that's where you ended. You can continue. --- There was a meeting in a Roman Catholic Church. It was on Sunday. It was a community meeting. During that meeting we came to know that people were not agreeing on each other, more especially the youth. As the meeting went on we realised that we couldn't reach a consensus, then we decided that we should leave the meeting. And as we left one guy died from the Zumo family. And then we continued, we left for home, until a day for the funeral came. And on that day most people died in that funeral. After the funeral most people got injured. Some people were shot, and were shot by people whom they didn't see, people who were hiding in the bushes waiting for us, the people who were from the funeral. The violence went on and we were forced to leave school and home. We left everything in our homes. We left for Clermont. I couldn't go back to my temporary job, because I had a temporary job which I used to work every Friday. And I couldn't go there because they were looking for my brother, and they were after me because they thought I knew where he was. I left school, I left my temporary job. That year was wasted. In 1991 I registered at Clermont in another school called Sibusisiwe School. I studied there for a year. The following year I didn't have someone to pay for my fees. In 1992 I continued studying. In 1993 I couldn't continue because of my family situation. I was helped by a certain organisation in Pinetown. In 1994 they helped me. I

/registered

registered for a course, KTT course. I studied. Even now I am still trying. I need to open my own business but I am failing.

What are you doing at the moment? --- I am doing wall and floor tiles. I am trying - I am advertising myself. Sometimes I do get customers, sometimes I don't.

What kind of a job are you doing? --- Tiling, wall and floor tiles.

Can we go back a little bit. I want you to tell us more about how your brother was killed. --- My brother was at KwaNdengezi. He is actually my uncle's son, but we grew up together in my father's house. So after we thought the violence cooled down at KwaNdengezi we went back to KwaNdengezi to stay there. One day we heard gunshots, and then we decided that we should run and hide ourselves. And then we did that, but we didn't go in the same direction, and then I discovered the next day that he was killed and other people were watching. What about Khumbulani Msomi? --- Khumbulani Msomi was my brother who was the leader of - he was my brother because we were from the same place, not because he was my real blood brother.

What really tortured you or tormented you it's because you've seen many people, friends and relatives, dying, and you also mentioned that you couldn't further your education because of the family situation. Would you please tell us how was the situation at home? --- Where we were staying in Clermont we couldn't bring my father along. It was just us and my mother, and my mother wasn't working.

If we can go back and ask what wishes you had at

/that time

that time before the violence, and what wishes you still have today? And I can see that you are still young, and I know you also had a dream about your future. Maybe you still have some of those dreams. Can you tell us? --- My dream was that I told myself a long time ago that after I have matriculated I'll go to technikon and I will do whatever I can to be a businessman on my own, but all this didn't happen because of the situation I had to live in. I do understand what you're saying, you have a gift, but I still haven't got exactly what your dream is. --- I would like to open a business of my own, like I would like to have a big business, like I am gifted, I am one person who can build things, make tiles, and all that.

CHAIRMAN: Thank you Makozonkhe. Before I summarise just one or two questions from me. You've said there was political violence in your area. Who was this violence between? Who was involved in this violence? --- Black on black - ANC. It was ANC and ANC, because ANC got divided.

How were they divided? --- They couldn't agree on one thing.

How did these two different groups come about - of ANC? --- There was a group which was planted in the township, and they came there just to destroy the KwaNdengezi people.

Who were they planted there by? --- We wouldn't know because we don't even know the people who started this. They are now dead.

The previous witness said that one of the two groups seemed to work with the police, and that it was the

KwaZulu Police, not the ordinary police. --- That is

/correct.

correct.

Where were these Zulu police from, which police station? --- KwaNdengezi Police Station.

Now, I just want to get some clarity. You said there was a meeting at the church, and that one Comrade was killed at that meeting. Which Comrade was that? --- Khumbulani Msomi.

And then you said that you were waiting for his funeral. --- Yes, we waited until his funeral.

After his funeral there was violence. --- That is correct.

People shot at you from bushes. --- That's correct.

How many people were injured in that shooting? Do you have any knowledge? --- Many people got injured. And I don't think there was anyone who was killed in that shooting, but many people were injured.

Was there ever a case about that shooting? --- I don't have knowledge of any case.

You then went on to tell us about the fact that things seemed to quiet down and then you went back there --- That is correct.

In your statement you said there were peace negotiations and there was some agreement reached between the differing organisations. Is that right? --- Yes, there was peace. There was peace, and people got together, and I think they used this because they wanted us to think that it's over, and then when they come back they'll kill us.

You then said that your cousin got killed in the

shooting there. --- My brother.

/Khombiseni

Khombiseni. --- Khombiseni Nzimande.

Did anyone else get injured or killed in that shooting on that day? --- I think there are people who were injured.

Was there any follow up cases or otherwise in relation to your brother's killing? --- They investigated but nothing happened afterwards. There was a case in Pinetown, but that case ended up nowhere.

I can just tell you that our investigators have tracked down the case of Khumbulani Msomi, but it is still under investigation today. We have not yet followed up whether there was an inquest into your brother's death, but our people will continue with their inquiries. Makozonkhe, thank you very much for coming and sharing with us. You've given us a picture of what happened in KwaNdengezi. We will obviously follow up that in much more detail. We will investigate what happened, and how this group, the Amavaravara came into existence. We also understand that there are still people from those groups who are around, and that things are dangerous for you and others, and knowing that experience makes it all the more important for us as a Commission to try and see what measures we can come up with to prevent further violence, so that people like yourself and your families can go back to your areas in peace. Thank you for coming here.

LUNCH ADJOURNMENT

/

ON RESUMPTION

ON RESUMPTION

CHAIRMAN: (Incomplete) ... Commission. There are people from the Commission staff who are able to take statements. They were at the back of the hall. If I can just ask them to wave their hands so you can see who they are. Right there at the back. If anyone wants to make a statement please will you contact those people at the back and they will try and take your statements. Thank you.

The next witness will be Bhekisizwe Professor Mbanjwa from Ephatheni. Good afternoon Bhekisizwe. If you can just put the headphones on please. Can you hear me now?

MR MBANJWA: Yes, I can hear you.

CHAIRMAN: You come from the Ephatheni area in Richmond, and we welcome you here. Before you give your evidence if you could please just stand to take the oath.

BHEKISIZWE PROFESSOR MBANJWA: (Sworn, States)

CHAIRMAN: Thank you. Please be seated. I will help you with your evidence this afternoon. Now, you were born on the 10th of January 1974, is that correct? --- That is correct.

Before we go into your story we would like to try and get a picture of your family. Can you tell us about your parents? Are they both still alive? --- Yes, they are still alive, but I am staying with my father. My father is at his home. We don't have our home. I am owning my own house now.

Are you married? --- Yes, I am married.

And how many children do you have? --- I have two children.

/Is that

Is that aged eight and one and a half years respectively? --- Yes, that is correct.

Who is Sabelo Mbanjwa? --- That's my child.

Your child. How old is Sabelo? --- He is 13 years old.

He's 13 years old. Are you working at the moment? --- I am not working.

And are either your mother or your wife working? --- My mother is a pensioner, she is epileptic, and my wife is not working.

Thank you. Now, the story you're going to tell us about happened in July 1991. What was going on in the Ephatheni area at that time? --- I will start from the beginning. My mother left me with her brother. That was my uncle. I grew up at my uncle's place. I was staying there with my grandfather ... (incomplete - end of Side A, Tape 3) ... took care of me. I went on with my education even though the situation was bad, and my uncles were working in Johannesburg, and the other one was working for Hulett Company, and the other one was - I started working at NPA. I left my uncles' place and I went and worked for a white man. His name was English. I started working at Mr Gammon when I was 17 years old. I could know stories about the Ephatheni area. I was no longer a hedge(?) boy. My mother got me before she was married. I used to work from early age. That's how I grew up until I became old, and when I was employed at Mr Gammon it was because I was a soccer player, and he had a firm. I worked there. One day I went visiting my home at Ephatheni. Violence began. I went visiting there. The white man whom I was working at told me that there was violence in the Ephatheni area.

/I went

I went visiting home. It was on Monday. I was a delivery boy, so I brought maize meal at home.

Carry on. --- I got injured and my uncle took me to hospital, to Ixopo Hospital. I stayed in that hospital. They failed to help me. They transferred me to Edendale Hospital. That's where my leg was amputated. At home they requested me from the hospital. I didn't like going back to Ephatheni because I thought ANC did what - shot me. My uncle took a car and they went to KwaGengeshe. The situation got tense at KwaGengeshe so I had no choice but to return back to Ephatheni. It wasn't easy for me to return to Ephatheni. I went to my mother's house. I wasn't satisfied about the treatment we were receiving from my stepfather. My stepfather used to swear at my mother. I asked the white man whom I was working at to take me to Government offices so that I could obtain an ID. He helped me and I have obtained an ID, and I started working at Mr Gomez. I got married to my wife, or I paid lobola, and she was pregnant at that time. At that time I was receiving pension, and my child died. I started taking care of my father's child, or rather my stepfather's child. And then he grew up and then he got married. My mother left her house and then she came and stayed with me, and then my stepfather came and chased my mother out of my house.

So the situation is that you are living in your own house. --- Yes, I am staying at my own house.

Is your mother back with you again? --- She ran away, because my father came and told her that I was his child and she must go away from my house.

Now, I want to just go back a little bit to the time

/that you

that you were shot. Can you - what happened? Were you driving a vehicle, were you walking on the road? You didn't say very much about that. --- I got injured because on a Monday afternoon after work I had to bring my mother some maize meal, and I have heard about the situation that it was tense, so I took one of the lorries and I went home. I am staying nearby, and then the lorry dropped me there, and I got attacked late at night at home.

So you were walking to your mother's home? --- That's correct, it was my mother's home. It was before I have my own house.

Now, in your statement you've said that you believe that the people who shot you were actually IFP members. --- Yes, they were IFP members. I wasn't happy that I was attacked by ANC. I wasn't happy that the people who attacked me were ANC.

Sorry, the translation is saying ANC and you're saying IFP. Can we just clarify this please? The people that attacked you, what were their - what was their political affiliation? --- It was late at night at about half past 11. I wasn't happy that it was ANC who shot at me. I think - I suspect that it was IFP. I am not happy that it had been said that it was ANC.

Who said it was ANC? --- As I have already explained it was late at night. In my mind I wasn't happy that it was ANC. Besides, the way the ANC used to attack people they will come and they will not run away. Those people who attacked me ran away, and my uncle when he came he didn't find them there.

In fact you're not quite sure who they were, you

/didn't

didn't see them at all? --- No, I am not sure. I never got to know who they were.

In that place where your mother was living at that time what was the predominant political affiliation? --- At Ephatheni we were divided into two. When this thing happened I wasn't there, but I know those boys - or rather the youths in that area they were divided. They youths left their parents. They used to come at night and attack.

What was your own political affiliation at that time? --- Where I grew up at KwaGengeshe there were no political organisations. I was staying at the white man's house where I was working.

So are you saying that you were not aligned to any political party? --- Yes, I wasn't, because I was staying at the white man's house. I became an IFP member because I am now at Ephatheni.

Just to deal with your injury. You lost your leg in this incident and you now have a false leg, is that right? --- That is correct.

Are you able to work and ... (incomplete) --- No, I am unable. I tried to go back to the white man I used to work for, and he told me he can't give me any job now. Now he can't give me any job. I didn't further my education, I left school at standard five.

Do you get a disability pension? --- Yes, I do, even though I have faced a problem in 1994 July.

Was any report made to the police about your shooting? --- No. Police didn't receive any information because people were threatened to - they were scared to talk to police.

/So are

So are you saying that some people did actually see what happened, but they were too afraid to talk to the police? --- At home they know about this incident, but people were scared and they were being attacked by talking to police.

So there's been no case about your injuries? --- There was never one.

Thank you. I just want to see if any of my colleagues want to ask you any questions. (Pause)

Bhekisizwe, I can see here that what's really sad is that you lost your future. Is that true? --- That is correct, I lost my future, and I could tell earlier on that I will become a star in soccer.

You are still young. Can you please tell us your dreams? --- There are some dreams which are still left, which are still there.

Which one where we can help you so that you further your dreams, or you make your dreams come true? --- I tried initially to survive, and I was selling liquor and cool drinks and food, but now I have lost that chance because the owner of the shop came close by, and now he is selling from his house. What I would really like to know from you is that of course you've got injured, you've lost your leg, but now your mind is still there. Do you have a dream or something that you want to do? We just want to know how we can help you. --- I've made contact with my uncles. I have tried that they should take me to a driving school, but now because I have lost my leg, and they have realised that I am now injured, I should try something else, I should use my pension to buy material so

/that I

that I can make things.

Thank you. That's exactly what we wanted to know. We wanted you to tell us as to how we can help you. After you've made up your mind you can come to our offices and let us know how to help you.

Mr Mbanjwa, I would like to go back a little bit, especially as to why were you injured, or why were you attacked. You said you are now an IFP member. --- Yes, that is correct.

When you were attacked were you a member of IFP? --- No, I wasn't, because even today I am not a cardholder of IFP.

You also said that when you were attacked there were rumours that ANC people attacked you. --- Yes, that was well known, because if you were attacked as an IFP member it was a usual thing that they will say IFP attacked you, or if you were IFP they will say ANC attacked you. But with me I didn't believe because I was staying in a white man's house and I wasn't affiliated with any political organisation.

Why would IFP attack you? --- I believe that they can attack me because there was a rumour that I wasn't brave.

Who said you were not brave? --- IFP members used to call me a coward.

Why would IFP say you were a coward? --- It was because I was scared to go to funerals. Even when my relatives were killed at a Ephatheni I didn't go to their funerals.

You must stop me if I put this thing wrong. Were

/they

they saying you were a coward because IFP members from Ephatheni were being killed, and you didn't go there to their funerals to bury them? --- Yes. I think that's why they said so, because I was scared, and my uncles used to tell me not to get involved in this violence.

Beside this rumour that you were a coward is there anything that you will suspect that IFP were the people who attacked you? --- No, nothing.

Now you are staying at IFP area or IFP dominated area. How is the situation there? --- I am staying nicely there, and it's peaceful.

Are there any people who are coming to you and tell you - or apologise to you about this incident? --- No, no one. And because of that I still say I suspect it's IFP, because whenever ANC was attacking any house or anyone they were arrested, but with my case there was no one arrested. If it was ANC members they would have arrested them, but it was IFP, that's why they ran away, no one arrested them. And my uncle said he really wants to know who attacked me. He's the one who took me to hospital, to Sanatory Hospital

The last question. Is it possible that the people who attacked you were criminals, not IFP? --- Yes, it can be possible, more especially now I have noticed that criminality in this country is really at the highest level. You can't leave your laundry in lines, you can't leave anything. They steal windows, everything.

Are there people like that in your area who were criminals, and yet they were known as IFP members? --- Even if they won't come forward, but they know themselves.

Let me just ask one last question, because now that

/you gave

you gave us your statement we must follow the rule, we must investigate. Are there any people that you think might be responsible for what happened to you? I mean someone that you might have heard his voice, or might have seen his jacket, even though you won't tell us here in public, but maybe you can give us those names in private? --- I would like to put this before the Commission, that even today I don't know if I am safe or not. I didn't recognise any voice because I wasn't staying there in that area up until today. I didn't even see anyone that I know. I only heard dogs barking outside, and they knocked at the door. I didn't want to open the door, and then I rushed into the window to jump off outside, and then that's when they started shooting. My uncle came through the window, and then he helped me. He is the one who helped me.

Thank you. As I have said that if you have any information you mustn't be scared to tell us or to let us know.

CHAIRMAN: Mr Mbanjwa, thank you very much for coming. Thank you very much for sharing and giving us a picture of what was going on in Ephatheni at that time. It seems that from what you have told us people who remain anonymous came to your mother's house, and attacked your mother's house and shot you, and have left you with irreparable damage to your body. However, you seem to be a person who is happy to take advantage of opportunities, who has shown initiative, and who gives us hope for the future. You're someone who's always looking for a way to make your life better, and as such you are a good example to many other people who have suffered in violence who can

/make the

make the most of things. And we really want to thank you for bringing that hope to us, and we wish you very well as you head back home. So once again thank you for coming. --- Thank you.

/

CHAIRMAN

CHAIRMAN: Kwezi, we welcome you as one of the facilitators from yesterday's group. Before you continue to tell us about the groups that you facilitated yesterday could you please stand just to take the oath.

KWEZI MALAHLEYA: (Sworn, States)

CHAIRMAN: Thank you very much. Would you please continue to tell us about the groups that you facilitated yesterday? --- Yesterday we were working with Port Shepstone children, and most of them, if not all of them, are from Gamalakhe. And in fact Gamalakhe area it's where they are staying now, but they are originally from Umzumbe. These children were drawing pictures of their lives, more especially during the violence. What is very clear in these pictures is that they have suffered because of the violence between two organisations, which are ANC and IFP. And there were as well police, and police were helping IFP. And the pictures here they show that these children were staying at ANC area, ANC dominated area, and we can see in these pictures a yellow van belonging to the police, and IFP welcoming them. And I would like to play the tape in which a certain girl, who is now 12 years old - and when these things happened this child was six years old in 1991.

"We used to arrive at home and not find parents, and parents have ran away. And we will also run away and hide in the bushes, and there we will be bitten by mosquitoes, and houses will be set alight and people will be running away. My home was burnt, and everything inside

/my home.

my home. I still have my parents. No one was injured."

This girl said,

"I am a girl who is 12 years old. When violence started I was six years old and we were staying at Umzembini area. I used to walk from home to school, and as we will come back from school with my schoolmates we will find no parents at all at home, and we were supposed to think as to what to do, because we could tell that violence had broken out, and we would go to the bushes and we would stay there without food for days. And for days we wouldn't know where our parents are, and I wouldn't even know if my parents were alive. I stayed for ... (incomplete - end of Side B, Tape 3) ... go to school and study with other kids. We couldn't play like any other kids. We were supposed to think as to where to get food or to hide ourselves. My friends lost families. We would hear gunfire at night and we wouldn't know if they were shooting at someone that we know. Sometimes they were shooting at young kids who were also six years, and we didn't know that we were going to survive. That's how we stayed."

This is where the story of this 12-year-old child ends, and her story is almost similar to the stories of the

/other

other children in the group, and what is very important is that they couldn't stay in their homes and they had to survive under those conditions. They were supposed to think as to what to eat and where to stay.

I would like to direct one question to you, Kwezi, because we are giving a report. Now, there's a six-year-old child, and because of what the child has experienced I want to know from you if they have now survived this, or are they living a life which is not going to be fixed, or something that we will help? --- I would like to highlight this to the Commission, is that because of what they have experienced, these children, they have lost some stages on the way as children, and if you can look at their requests and their wishes you can tell that what they need is different from what any other kid who didn't experience what they've experienced would need, because these children they are asking for schools to be built in their area.

Again maybe I can ask were you able to obtain if some of these children went back to school, or went back to their families? --- The kind of life they are living it's like they are refugees at Gamalakhe, and their life is not back to normal because they are staying at slum areas, and these are now houses which can survive winds and rains. And the parents lost jobs and they are very poor.

CHAIRMAN: Kwezi, just for the record, it's correct your surname is Malahleya, is that correct, if you'll excuse my rather - and you work with Child Welfare as manager of a shelter for so-called street children? --- I am working for the Durban Welfare Organisation and I am

/dealing

dealing with the street children project.

Thank you very much for giving us that insight to some of the stories of children from the Port Shepstone and, as you said, Umzumbe areas. Thank you very much.

/

CHAIRMAN

CHAIRMAN: The next facilitator who will be talking will be Dominic from Port Shepstone. Dominic, for the record, just if you'll help us, what is your surname please? Msomi. And I see that you have one of our staff members, Moses Pitso, with you, who will be presenting as well together with you. If you will please just rise to take the oath.

DOMINIC MSOMI and MOSES PITSO: (Sworn, State)

CHAIRMAN: If you can please start then. Sorry, if Dominic - I don't know which of you is going to start. You'll start, Mr Pitso? --- Ja, I will start giving a presentation, and then Dominic will give you an overview.

Thank you. --- These are the stories that have been related to us by children that have been subjected to human rights violations in areas around the lower South Coast, and I'll try and give you the presentation as they gave to us of maybe four kids. The first statement is of a young girl now aged 13, and when the violation happened she was only seven years old.

"I am a young girl of 13, and seven years ago - six years ago when this violation happened me and my family we lived in Bethani, and that was a mostly IFP area, and we were all expected to be IFP members. My family and I were ANC members, and as a result of that we had to leave Bethani to go to Emavundleni to avoid or to run away from the violence. But the violence followed us there, and the story that I am going to tell you

/about

about is of what happened to my family there. One fateful afternoon in 1992 my father was forcibly taken from our home by people known to us, and he was taken under the false pretext that he has to attend an IFP meeting. That was the last time that I saw my father alive, and when the facts actually came out later we found out that my father was actually taken into the nearby forest, where he was brutally murdered. The reason that we later found out was that because he was an ANC member. That night my younger brother, my mum and myself went into the forest looking for our father, and then what I saw that night I have been carrying around with me ever since. My father had bullet wounds and stab wounds all over his body, and ever since that day I vowed to revenge my father's death."

That was the first story.

Please continue. ---

"Ever since the day that my father has died I have vowed to revenge his death, and remember I am only 13 now."

Sorry, we're just having a problem. There doesn't appear to be the Zulu translation coming out again. It's not coming through in the main hall. Could the translator just try and talk, let's just see if anything will come through. (Pause) Can you just talk again. Okay, it's

/there

there now. ---

"And remember I am only 13 now."

Continue. --- That was the first story, and then

the second story that had been related was of a 15-year-old girl who witnessed this violation when she was only eight.

"It was 2.00 pm on this fateful afternoon of the 10th of April 1990 when police came to my place knocking, demanding to see my brother. My brother's name was Sibongiseni, and when he got out the police just shot him in the stomach and then shot again on the right thigh. My brother then fell outside in our yard and bled. My father tried to - actually my father spoke to the police and asked them to give him permission to take my brother to hospital, but they refused. They sat watching my brother bleeding there for three hours. At around 5.00 pm they called the ambulance. My brother was taken to hospital, where he died the following morning at 7.00 am. These policemen that shot my brother were all from the South African Police. It was both black policemen and white policemen."

And then I'll give you the third story, again of a young girl who today is 15, and when this violation occurred she was only three. She is a young girl from Umzumbe area, also from the lower South Coast, a place known as

/KwaMadlala.

KwaMadlala.

"In 1985 there was an attempt by a group of ANC members to launch an ANC branch in KwaMadlala. This attempt was met with a fierce opposition from the Inkatha Freedom Party. From that day on there was violence in our area. I have personally witnessed at that tender age people being attacked with spears, and gunned down in numbers. Houses of those that did not belong to Inkatha Freedom Party were burnt down. We were forced to flee our area and slept in the nearby forest, because night time was dying time for us. Even schooling was disrupted, in most cases by police, and this led to me having started schooling very late. In one instance I witnessed a policeman making a child hold a bomb, and this bomb exploded in this child's hands and tore her to pieces. This incident has been witnessed, and some that are like it, by most of kids of my generation in that area. I still have distrust for the police. I am unhappy that I could not go to school in time, and I blame the police for the disruptions in our schools. I still harbour hatred and fear for those that have committed these acts. I can still remember these acts explicitly."

/This

This would be the story by the third child. The last

story is also by a young girl who is 13 now, and when this violation occurred or happened she was only 10.

"My family and I were from the ANC, and in the area that we stayed there, an area called Nkothaneni, an area under Nkuzi Magabe, my father one evening was shot by Inkatha members. The reason that was given was that my father did not want to attend an IFP camp. It was normal during those days that on Friday afternoons that males in that area would go to an IFP camp, and it was known that my father wasn't an Inkatha member and he refused. So that fateful evening a group of men came to our house. And then they knocked at the door demanding to see my father. On realising that he was not there they started shooting in the air. My father was a few metres away from our place at my granny's funeral. He then came home and then these people ran away. Later on that evening we heard disturbances outside. When my father went out to investigate he was shot, and then my father laid in our yard all night because we were afraid to go out. We could not go out out of fear. The next morning we found my father in the yard. We found his body in the yard with insects sprawling

/all over

all over him. To this day I still can remember this incident clearly, and this has been portrayed in my drawings to the Truth Commission."

Yes, this was the last story of those stories that we got from places around Port Shepstone, given to us by kids that experienced these violations.

Thank you for those stories. If we can then move on to the next overview. --- I would relate a story about the violence in Port Shepstone. It started in 1990 to 1994. What happened to the communities in Port Shepstone because of the violence, people could not stay in one place for a long period or for a longer time, and as they were moving up and down they will take their children with. And children were tortured because they were not in their areas. Families got scattered. Up until today there are children who don't know where their parents are. They don't even know where to look for their parents. What's even sad is that they don't even know whether they are still alive or they are dead. What they've lost it's enormous. They lost their parents who were taking care of them, their parents whom they were depending on. They have lost their security, they have lost trust. They have lost trust in the elderly because during the violations adults were the ones who were attacking. Now these children are scared of adults. Up until today they don't have trust. They don't even have trust on themselves. They have low self-esteem. They have suffered trauma. In schools they have experienced depression, and because they have been moving up and down, and because they have settled in areas where they are not used to, and now they

/have to

have to attend schools where they don't know anyone, and they are not accepted by other children or by community or teachers. And sometimes some of the teachers themselves they belong to other organisations, so therefore it's difficult for them to accept children like those. And sometimes other schools are built by people who belong to other organisations, therefore the children have no choice if they go to those schools they won't be accepted as children. Maybe if I can just show you a picture where a child has drawn, and they are trying to show how she has suffered. In this picture the house is set alight, and parents and children are carrying bags and they don't know where they are going. Some of them are going to sleep under the trees, some of them are going to relatives. I am trying to explain how the children had suffered. Even today if you ask them to relate those stories you can tell that they lose concentration. Some of them left schools, they didn't go back to school up until today. Some of them did go back to school, and some of them didn't because they didn't have money to go back to school, and parents who were responsible for taking them to school, or buying them food, they died in this violence. And some of these children ended up taking glue, smoking dagga, to forget about their bitterness. Children are supposed to be free. Children are supposed to play soccer or whatever sport with each other, but here our children they are scared because of they are stigmatised as to what group their parents belong. And again I would like to highlight some facts on the health of the children. In their drawings you can actually see the sadness and the bitterness. They are scared, they are afraid, and they do

/say that

say that they don't feel accepted by their friends or other children. They laugh at them, and some of them they call them names. And this shows us that these children have been traumatised, and they are still traumatised today. I will show you a picture. I'll take one story of one child whom his or her house was attacked late at night, and the child was asleep together with her sister. At the time the child was five years old, and then now she said this one was her mum, and then her sister, and then her father. They are being shot, and this child said when they were shot she was asleep. They saw her in a pool of blood. They thought she was also dead, but she wasn't, because when this shooting occurred she was fast asleep. The next day she went to a neighbour, and then she went to an induna, and the induna helped. I would like you to listen to the tape.

"In 1991 in August, it was about 12.00 pm, IFP came to my house. They killed my mother, my father, and my sister and my younger sister. When I woke up in the morning everyone was dead. Only me and my younger sister, who was shot at her knee, was alive. We went to induna's house and induna called the police. Police came in the morning. We went and stayed with my grandmother at Bhoboyi, and my grandmother is getting pension. That's how she is maintaining us. And she is getting this pension and she is sick, and we would like to request from the President that

/he must

he must build us a house, and help us about building a school where we can go and study."

As we have heard this child has been traumatised, and this child is staying with her grandmother, and the grandmother is sickly, very sick, and the younger sister who also survived is also sick. And this child is scared. She doesn't know who is going to pay for her education if the grandmother dies. Again I would also relate to you a story of a young girl who was tortured, and who also saw her uncle being killed or shot dead, and also she ... (incomplete - end of Side A, Tape 4) ... watched while they are raping her aunt. This is how the children had been tortured. Another picture which I have here from an eight-year-old girl. She drew her father as a small or young man, and the mother being short, and when I asked the child why she is drawing the father short she said the reason she drew her father short it's because the father was helpless, and they surrounded her father and they poured petrol on him and burnt him. What is very sad about this is that these children, most of them they know the people who did this, and those people are still alive and they see them every day. And another child said - who is eight years old said, "I am just waiting for my revenge."

Thank you, Dominic and Moses, for both those accounts. All these stories are some of the worst we've ever heard in this Commission, and we've heard some pretty terrible stories. I think the fact that people can show so little care towards children indicates the degree to which political violence polarised people to the point

/where

where they became so brutalised they didn't even see the children, let alone the other human beings and the grown-ups. And thank you for sharing those experiences with us.

/

CHAIRMAN

CHAIRMAN: The penultimate part of today's hearing - sorry don't let me stop your applause. The penultimate part of today's hearing is a presentation of children's expectations and requests, and Noreen and her group of children have done some rehearsing for us, and I ask that they all come up please.

MACHINE SWITCHED OFF

ON RESUMPTION

CHAIRMAN: (Incomplete) ... those colourful drawings, and for the lovely singing, and I hope that we will have those little placards with their expectations and what they'd like to see on them, so that some of our staff can record them.

I now have to try and summarise very briefly for you the two days of what we've done here. As I have said throughout the day, for us in the Commission it's been very important that the voice of the children be heard, and if one is going to be absolutely honest some of us were not quite sure how valuable this hearing would actually be. And I feel quite comfortable telling you that the sceptics among us have been silenced. As we've progressed through this experience the more we've come to understand how important it has been.

We have heard children and youth from the South Coast areas, from areas around Durban and Pinetown, from some North Coast areas, and from Ephatheni, and the one thing that is incredibly striking is how exactly the same so many of the stories are. The sorts of things that have happened all over this province have happened to the same sorts of people, even though they are from different political backgrounds, and clearly indicate the incredible

/lack of

lack of respect that people had for one another.

If we are to try and rebuild this province and this country, as Ann Mackay very aptly said, we will need to put a great deal of energy, a great deal of resources, into healing our future, who are our children and our youth. It is our hope that as we look forward, and as our Commission comes to the end of its work, that we will be able to take the experiences that we have heard over the last few days and, more importantly, the hopes of those children, and try and distil them into some concrete action, or at least recommendations for action.

I think it remains for me to thank everyone who has played a role in this hearing, all the people from the various children's organisations, all the care-givers, and if I leave anyone out please forgive me, there's a long list of organisations. The KwaZulu-Natal Survivors of Violence Organisation, the Pinetown Children's Organisations, Durban Children's Organisations - just one moment - the Mahawu High School, who brought their children here today, Mr Mbanjwa and his colleague, who have brought people from Newcastle, the Children's Rights Committee, the KwaMashu Group, of course the media, who have given us a great deal of coverage, and we hope will continue to do that, the TRC staff who have been here, and who have worked very hard, the caterers, the South African Police Services for protecting us in this place and making us feel a bit more secure, the translators and people involved with the sound equipment - they haven't had as easy a task as it may have been - the Durban Christian Centre for the use of this venue. And then, lastly, all the care-givers and parents who took the trouble to come

/and to

and to be here and to support the children, members of the public, and, as Dr Magwaza said, it's quite sad that so few of the public, the general public, were here today. And then, lastly, all the children that have come to share with us and to tell us about how they feel, and also to tell us about what they expect from us if we are to regain their confidence and help them to grow. So I thank all of you once again on behalf of the Commission for helping us to make this hearing work.

We will close this hearing with a short prayer by Mr Mbanjwa from Newcastle, if he will please come up and just lead us in a short prayer please.

CLOSING PRAYER BY MR MBANJWA

CHAIRMAN: Thank you once again everybody, and I finally close this hearing. Thank you everybody.

/TRANSCRIBER'S

 
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