Truth Commission Special Report
Decision - 59519

Type: AMNESTY DECISIONS
Names: MDUDUZI GUMBI, ROBERT ZUMA
Matter: AM0350/96; AM0433/96
Decision: REFUSED
URL: https://sabctrc.saha.org.za/hearing.php?id=59519&t=&tab=hearings
Original File: https://sabctrc.saha.org.za/originals/decisions/2001/ac21237.htm
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AC/2001/237

TRUTH AND RECONCILIATION   COMMISSION AMNESTY COMMITTEE APPLICATION IN TERMS OF SECTION 18 OF THE PROMOTION   OF NATIONAL UNITY AND RECONCILIATION ACT

NO. 34 OF 1995.

       MDUDUZI       GUMBI           1ST         APPLICANT             (AM0350/96)                                                 ROBERT       ZUMA           2ND         APPLICANT             (AM0433/96)                                                                                DECISION       These are applications for   amnesty in terms of the provisions of Section 18 of the Promotion of National   Unity and Reconciliation Act, No 34 of 1995 ("the Act").The matter   relates to the killing of a large number of people, mostly women and children,   in an attack launched by a group of more than 60 men, including the Applicants   at Towlendeni, in the district of Richmond on 23 June 1991.Pursuant to this   incident, the Applicants were convicted in the Natal Provincial Division of   the then Supreme court on 27 November 1992 of 26 counts including murder, attempted   murder and the unlawful possession of firearms and ammunition. Pursuant to their   conviction, the Applicants were sentenced to long terms of imprisonment. The   applications were opposed by the next-of-kin of some of the victims of the attack.

 Both Applicants testified   in support of the applications. Their versions largely coincided and can be   set out briefly as follows.   During the course of the   afternoon on 23 June 1991 the Ncobeni residential area, where both Applicants   reside, was attacked by a group of men. One of the inhabitants of the area was   injured in the attack. The attackers were thought to be members or supporters   of the African National Congress ("ANC") which was engaged in a violent   political conflict in the area with the Inkatha Freedom Party ("IFP").   Both Applicants were members of the IFP and their residential area was an IFP   stronghold. Applicants and other male occupants of the area were able to repel   the attack. Soon after the incident, they gathered to discuss the attack. In   the course of the discussion it was proposed that they should launch a revenge   attack upon known ANC areas in the vicinity. It was left to those present to   volunteer to participate in the attack. None of the IFP leadership in the area   attended the meeting or authorised the attack. Applicants in fact indicated   that the group did not take any steps to consult any of the IFP leaders in the   area because they knew that these leaders would not sanction a revenge attack   which was in any event contrary to the policies of the IFP.   

An armed group of more than   60 men, including the Applicants, proceeded to Towlendeni where the attacks   were to be launched. The first Applicant, Gumbi was armed with a 9mm pistol,   a shotgun and a spear, while the second Applicant, Zuma, was armed with a spear.

The group set off in the   early evening. Upon their arrival at Towlendeni and just prior to launching   the attacks they divided into two groups that went in different directions.   Over the course of the next several hours a number of homesteads were attacked   and whoever the groups came across was either killed or assaulted very seriously   and left for dead. Any house in the vicinity that showed any signs of life was   attacked and the inhabitants indiscriminately set upon. As it became apparent   that mostly women were being killed, an argument developed amongst the members   of the group of attackers. Some of them, including the Applicants, were opposed   to the killing of women and children. No consensus was reached and the indiscriminate   killings simply continued until approximately midnight. At the end of this killing   spree, approximately 12 people, including a 3 year old child, were killed.

Applicants eventually faced   26 counts of murder and attempted murder in the Pietermaritzburg Supreme Court   arising from the incident. The evidence of Ms Zokhile   Judith Dlamini was led in opposition to the applications. Their house was the   first to be attacked during the incident. She vividly described how a group   of attackers, including first Applicant, Gumbi, attacked her mother and two   sisters while she was watching from her hiding place behind one of the doors   in the house. Her two sisters were killed and her mother badly injured in the   attack. Miraculously she escaped the ordeal unscathed. She described how she   looked around for help in order to take her mother to the hospital and how she   came across a number of other people who were either killed or badly injured   in the neighbouring homesteads. After a considerable lapse of time, the police   arrived on the scene and her mother was eventually hospitalised and fortunately   survived the attack. Having carefully considered   the evidence, we are satisfied that the Applicants did not act on any orders   of the leadership of the IFP in the area. They were, in fact, aware at the time   of launching the attack that the IFP leadership would not authorise their actions.   It is clear that they were solely actuated by the desire to take revenge because   one of their number was injured in an attack by unknown attackers believed to   be members of the ANC. They consciously decided against approaching any of the   IFP leadership prior to launching the attack. It is accordingly clear that they   were not acting on behalf of or in furtherance of a political struggle waged   at the time by the IFP. Furthermore, their actions were wholly disproportionate   in the circumstances. They decided upon the revenge attack because one of their   number was injured. They proceeded to indiscriminately kill mostly women and   a 3 year old child. Eventually 26 people fell victim to the attack, 12 of whom   were killed. In the circumstances we   are not satisfied that the incident constitutes an act associated with a political   objective as envisaged in the Act and the applications are accordingly REFUSED.   DATED AT CAPE TOWN THIS___DAY   OF____2001.                 JUDGE A.       WILSON                             JUDGE S.       KHAMPEPE                             ACTING       JUDGE D. POTGIETER   

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